학술논문

The pursuit of humanity: curriculum change in English school science.
Document Type
Article
Source
History of Education. May2011, Vol. 40 Issue 3, p291-313. 23p. 1 Graph.
Subject
*CURRICULUM change
*SCIENCE education
*EDUCATIONAL change
*CURRICULUM planning
*PHYSICAL sciences education
*DISCOVERY method (Teaching)
*LEARNER autonomy
*VOCATIONAL education
Language
ISSN
0046-760X
Abstract
This paper is concerned with the recent history of science curriculum reform in England, though it traces these developments back to the mid-nineteenth century. It first reviews approaches to science in the curriculum until the mid-1960s, identifying the curricular settlement of the postwar years and the beginning of the so-called 'swing from science'. It then examines structural shifts which undermined this settlement, including the introduction of comprehensive schooling, and the declining relative recruitment to physical science in post-compulsory education. It goes on to explore subsequent attempts at reform, setting them in the context of increasingly centralised control of the curriculum and changing patterns of professional representation. Three reform themes are identified: a reconstruction of the notion of discovery learning around student investigation; increasing attention to social and ethical issues; and a growing emphasis on vocationalism. It argues that these themes have been merged into a new flexible curricular settlement, which imitates important characteristics of the humanities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]