The purpose of this paper is to approach the phenomenon of post-Truth politics as an important site of inquiry for the field of curriculum theory. The authors define curriculum as the empirical frameworks that shape our acts of knowing, being, and relating to the world, and argue that inquiries into curriculum must move beyond a concern with epistemology alone. The framework of empiricism ensures that curriculum scholars attend simultaneously to learned habits and methods of knowing and relating to the world. These habits and methods, in turn, have particular ethical, epistemic, and ontological commitments. The authors point to particular empirical frameworks that tacitly inform the disciplinary organization of schooling, before exploring a...
Dewey continues to offer arguments that remain powerful on the need to break down the divisions betw...
Reflects on views of knowledge in the curriculum as evident in the field of Curriculum Studies; outl...
Building from the notion that learning occasions an `ontological’ violence, this paper examines the...
In this paper, I explore the role of knowledge in the curriculum through a discussion of John Dewey'...
This book engages with the dynamic intersection of several domains such as philosophy, psychology, s...
This article examines the relationship of curriculum and didactics through a social realist lens. Cu...
This article examines the relationship of curriculum and didactics through a social realist lens. Cu...
© 2011 Dr. John John QuayEducation is inseparable from experience. Consequently, lack of a coherent ...
This paper revisits the field of (Higher) Education for Sustainable Development in a post-truth era....
Presentation given at American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting. In “Unsettling the C...
Curriculum has traditionally been an ahistorical and technical field. The consequence has been to vi...
This book proposes a development of the method of inquiry in relation to the theory of revision. The...
The rise of populism has sparked a debate about the role of facts in public discourse. How should hi...
Full text of this article is not available in the UHRAAs part of a higher degree on research methods...
Contemporary postmodern philosophy has been characterized by its radical rejection of the epistemic ...
Dewey continues to offer arguments that remain powerful on the need to break down the divisions betw...
Reflects on views of knowledge in the curriculum as evident in the field of Curriculum Studies; outl...
Building from the notion that learning occasions an `ontological’ violence, this paper examines the...
In this paper, I explore the role of knowledge in the curriculum through a discussion of John Dewey'...
This book engages with the dynamic intersection of several domains such as philosophy, psychology, s...
This article examines the relationship of curriculum and didactics through a social realist lens. Cu...
This article examines the relationship of curriculum and didactics through a social realist lens. Cu...
© 2011 Dr. John John QuayEducation is inseparable from experience. Consequently, lack of a coherent ...
This paper revisits the field of (Higher) Education for Sustainable Development in a post-truth era....
Presentation given at American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting. In “Unsettling the C...
Curriculum has traditionally been an ahistorical and technical field. The consequence has been to vi...
This book proposes a development of the method of inquiry in relation to the theory of revision. The...
The rise of populism has sparked a debate about the role of facts in public discourse. How should hi...
Full text of this article is not available in the UHRAAs part of a higher degree on research methods...
Contemporary postmodern philosophy has been characterized by its radical rejection of the epistemic ...
Dewey continues to offer arguments that remain powerful on the need to break down the divisions betw...
Reflects on views of knowledge in the curriculum as evident in the field of Curriculum Studies; outl...
Building from the notion that learning occasions an `ontological’ violence, this paper examines the...