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  1. Translating the Prescribed into the Enacted Curriculum in College and School.Richard Edwards - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (S1):38-54.
    Drawing upon concepts from actor-network theory (ANT), this article explores how the principle of symmetry can provide alternative readings of the translations of the prescribed into the enacted curriculum, without reducing understanding to explanation. The paper explores the contrasting ways in which the prescribed curriculum is translated into the enacted curriculum as certain organisations, individuals and artefacts become enrolled through networks of school and college. It points to the ways in which a position which eschews conventional distinctions e.g. between the (...)
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  • Making teachers in Britain: Professional knowledge for initial teacher education in England and Scotland.Ian Menter, Estelle Brisard & Ian Smith - 2006 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 38 (3):269–286.
    There is an apparent contradiction between the widespread moves towards a uniform and instrumentalist standards‐based approach to teaching on the one hand and recent research‐based insights into the complexity of effective pedagogies. The former tendency reflects a politically driven agenda, the latter is more professionally driven. Tensions reflecting such a contradiction are evident in the debates over initial teacher education policy and practice in many parts of the world. This article examines aspects of ITE policy in two contiguous parts of (...)
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  • Conceptual Learning: The Priority for Higher Education.Effie Maclellan - 2005 - British Journal of Educational Studies 53 (2):129 - 147.
    The common sense notion of learning as the all-pervasive acquisition of new behaviour and knowledge, made vivid by experience, is an incomplete characterisation, because it assumes that the learning of behaviour and the learning of knowledge are indistinguishable, and that acquisition constitutes learning without reference to transfer. A psychological level of analysis is used to argue that conceptual learning should have priority in higher education.
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  • Translating the Prescribed into the Enacted Curriculum in College and School.Edwards Richard - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (S1):38-54.
    Drawing upon concepts from actor‐network theory (ANT), this article explores how the principle of symmetry can provide alternative readings of the translations of the prescribed into the enacted curriculum, without reducing understanding to explanation. The paper explores the contrasting ways in which the prescribed curriculum is translated into the enacted curriculum as certain organisations, individuals and artefacts become enrolled through networks of school and college. It points to the ways in which a position which eschews conventional distinctions e.g. between the (...)
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