1. NATIONAL CURRICULUM IN AUSTRALIA: AN INSTRUMENT OF CORPORATE FEDERALISM.
- Author
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Bartlett, Leo
- Subjects
- *
FEDERAL government , *CURRICULUM planning , *IDEALISM , *CULTURE , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
National curriculum development in Australia has been characterised in a number of ways. In the 1970s words such as 'core', 'common' and 'progressive' were used to describe curriculum and these terms undoubtedly reflected the social idealism and cultural emphasis in curriculum at that time. In recent times a whole new state of descriptors has emerged. These include: 'common,' 'essential', 'assured,' 'guaranteed,' 'entitlement,' 'agreed,' 'compatible,' 'promulgated,' 'streamlined,' 'corporate' and 'instrumental'. All these words reflect the layered warnings and patterns of beliefs broadly defined as ideology within which the idea of curriculum development has been defined currently.
- Published
- 1992
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