From counter-cultural movement to global values: The US geography curriculum
It is helpful to make a distinction between societal values as reflected in textbooks and other teaching materials and using the curriculum to consciously attempt to change the values system of young people. Again, sometimes both of these things are going on simultaneously, as was the case with the...
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Published in | Global Perspectives in the Geography Curriculum pp. 60 - 82 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
United Kingdom
Routledge
2009
Taylor & Francis Group |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | It is helpful to make a distinction between societal values as reflected in
textbooks and other teaching materials and using the curriculum to
consciously attempt to change the values system of young people. Again,
sometimes both of these things are going on simultaneously, as was the
case with the national bias found in many twentieth-century textbooks.
This chapter will show how, as a result of the ethical turn, the US geography curriculum has progressively embraced objectives that can be
categorized as the latter, resulting in the growing inclusion of nonacademic aims for the subject. This transition fits into a broader pattern in
which all subjects have had to demonstrate their contribution to citizenship
education. The teaching of geography in both the US and England/Wales,
albeit with different timing, has become increasingly informed by social
and political concerns rather than the demands of the discipline itself, as
discussed in the previous chapter. |
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ISBN: | 9780415468954 9780415475495 041547549X 0415468957 |
DOI: | 10.4324/9780203890837-11 |