2015
DOI: 10.1007/s40841-015-0025-9
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Comparing Curriculum Types: ‘Powerful Knowledge’ and ‘21st Century Learning’

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Cited by 63 publications
(64 citation statements)
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“…Young and Muller's Future 3 , on the other hand, begins with an acknowledgement concerning the foundational relationship between knowledge forms, curricular organisation and pedagogy. The emphasis in Future 2 on pedagogy at the expense of knowledge has led to what Maton () terms ‘knowledge blindness’; a lack of recognition of the importance of different types of knowledge and how epistemic structures can and should effect pedagogy (Muller, , ; McPhail & Rata, ; McPhail, 2017a). In Future 3, some boundaries are to be maintained in order to differentiate the epistemic affordances of different types of knowledge—indeed, ‘boundary maintenance prior to boundary crossing’ is a key indicator of Future 3 curriculum thinking (Young & Muller, , p. 16).…”
Section: The 3 Futures Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Young and Muller's Future 3 , on the other hand, begins with an acknowledgement concerning the foundational relationship between knowledge forms, curricular organisation and pedagogy. The emphasis in Future 2 on pedagogy at the expense of knowledge has led to what Maton () terms ‘knowledge blindness’; a lack of recognition of the importance of different types of knowledge and how epistemic structures can and should effect pedagogy (Muller, , ; McPhail & Rata, ; McPhail, 2017a). In Future 3, some boundaries are to be maintained in order to differentiate the epistemic affordances of different types of knowledge—indeed, ‘boundary maintenance prior to boundary crossing’ is a key indicator of Future 3 curriculum thinking (Young & Muller, , p. 16).…”
Section: The 3 Futures Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This concept enabled us to develop an analytic framework (Maton & Chen, 2016); the utilisation of some developed theory that contains concepts for analysis of the underlying organising, causal or generative principles in the empirical data. At the centre of this analytic framework is the concept of epistemic structure, identified above as having important pedagogical implications for students' access to disciplinary concepts (Muller, 2006(Muller, , 2009McPhail & Rata, 2016;Rata, 2016). These concepts will allow us to consider interdisciplinarity more deeply and to consider the assertion of teachers in Naidoo's (2010) study that curricula integration is more difficult than it appears, particularly where there are inherent differences in the conceptual structure of subjects.…”
Section: Researching the Interdisciplinary Curriculum 1071mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Can sufficient access to the disciplinary concepts be provided when the focus of this combining is around themes or problems? These questions have led McPhail and Rata (2016) to theorise two forms of curriculum: one that emphasises conceptual progression, the progressive knowledge curriculum; the other that views knowledge as process, the twenty-first century curriculum. The degree to which the emphasis in curriculum design is on one or the other of these two approaches affects the challenge faced by teachers in integrating disciplines as systems of meaning in their own right.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…11 Naproti tomu "realistická" kurikula zůstávají převážně v rovině teoretických návrhů (jak tvrdí McPhail & Rata, 2016), nejsou tedy podložena empirickou evidencí 12 a nedostala příležitost osvědčit se ve škole.…”
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