1993
DOI: 10.1080/00933104.1993.10505702
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The Interdisciplinary Imperative for Citizenship Education

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Motives may be discerned through an analysis of the activity and its dynamics (Leont'ev 1978). Subject-integrated teaching could be described as a teaching activity where the object, in principal, is students' encounters with real-world problems (Beane 1995;Tanner and Tanner 1980;Wraga 1993). The object of subjectspecific teaching could be defined in the following words of Beane as Ba specialized set of techniques or processes by which to interpret or explain various phenomena^ (Beane 1995, p. 617).…”
Section: Theoretical Framework and Analytical Conceptsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Motives may be discerned through an analysis of the activity and its dynamics (Leont'ev 1978). Subject-integrated teaching could be described as a teaching activity where the object, in principal, is students' encounters with real-world problems (Beane 1995;Tanner and Tanner 1980;Wraga 1993). The object of subjectspecific teaching could be defined in the following words of Beane as Ba specialized set of techniques or processes by which to interpret or explain various phenomena^ (Beane 1995, p. 617).…”
Section: Theoretical Framework and Analytical Conceptsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Year Study, the term integrated curriculum also appeared in conjunction with the core curriculum movement in the 1930s and problem-centered core curricula in the 1940s and 1950s (Klein, 2006;Halbach, 2000). The core curriculum movement stressed a curriculum centered on the social needs of society and democratic citizenship with activities planned cooperatively by students and teachers (Wraga, 1993). The content of the core curriculum was not contained in subject-centered silos, but in the broad social issues common to all students (Johnson et al, 1994).…”
Section: Initiated By the Eightmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patrick and Remy as cited by Wraga (1993, p. 213) suggest that interdisciplinarity often "fails to provide appropriate conceptual and factual foundations for studies of problems, issues, and values" and that "students in poorly organized interdisciplinary courses often flounder". Other disadvantages of integration related to changing educator responsibilities include working with multiple groups of students; adding content responsibilities; dealing with at-risk students or low achievers; and an overwhelming amount of time and energy (Stasz et al, 1994;Vasquez-Mireles, & West, 2007;Wraga, 1993).…”
Section: Role Of the Teachermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, grade three students investigate the effects of immigration on communities through biography, demographic analysis, and geography. Alternatively, traditional units may be revised around a theme (Wraga, 1993). For example, grade two students learn about their community by identifying recreational activities, their geographic location and distance from school, and paint pictures and write poems to symbolize what the activities mean to them.…”
Section: Integration and Integrated Curriculamentioning
confidence: 99%