The curricular policies and how they translate in secondary education: an analysis based on post-critical theories.

dc.citation.titleCentro de Estudios e Investigaciones sobre el Curriculum y la Didáctica.es
dc.creatorCarlachiani, Camila
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-23T01:08:52Z
dc.date.available2019-05-23T01:08:52Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.description.abstractOur starting point is understanding the curriculum as a complicated conversation (Pinar, 2011) which connects past, present and future experiences. Since it is a symbolic construct, it should be historically, socially and autobiographically defined in order to be studied. In this sense, the curriculum- society relationship is inherent to the curricular investigation. We place this relationship in the context of the Generalized Structural Crisis (De Alba, 2007), which is presented as a “melting pot of unprecedented opportunities to contribute in different ways to the task of transforming reality towards a better world” (De Alba, 2007, p. 104). In this framework, the great challenge for secondary education in this century is the possibility of building social environments (De Alba, 2007) towards new world figures. From a post-critical perspective, we study the institutional development of the curriculum in the secondary school in connection with the different curricular policies’ decision levels and what this translates into (Casimiro Lopes, et. al., 2013). To achieve this, we intend to investigate which are the inclusion discourses and the meanings of secondary education that are present in the curricular policies from the supra level to the nano level (Stirling Network for Curriculum Studies, 2016) and how are these translated focusing the analysis on the local/global tension (Ball, 2001). Finally, we are interested in analyzing the curricular practices that, at the nano level, are able to dislocate the modern school format generating in young women and men school experiences (Dubet y Martuccelli, 1998) that guarantee the inclusive and obligatory characteristics. Based on a first approach to the field, it is possible to discern that the interdisciplinarity in teaching and its connection with local social issues constitute one way of approaching the mentioned dislocation. Its relevance lies in retrieving dimensions satanized by positivism: imagination, creativity, intuition, uncertainty (Torres Santomé, 1994).es
dc.description.filFil: Carlachiani, Camila. Escuela de Ciencias de la Educación. Facultad de Humanidades y Artes. Universidad Nacional de Rosario; Argentina.es
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2133/14850
dc.language.isoenges
dc.rightsopenAccesses
dc.rights.holderCarlachiani, Camilaes
dc.rights.texthttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/es
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/*
dc.subjectCurricular policieses
dc.subjectSecondary educationes
dc.subjectPost-critical theorieses
dc.titleThe curricular policies and how they translate in secondary education: an analysis based on post-critical theories.es
dc.typeconferenceObject
dc.typedocumento de conferencia
dc.typeacceptedVersion
dc.typeMaterial Didáctico
dc.type.collectioncomunicaciones
dc.type.versionacceptedVersiones
lom.educational.contextGradoes
lom.educational.contextPosgradoes
lom.educational.contextCentro CyTes
lom.educational.difficultyMediana Dificultades
lom.educational.esMDSI*
lom.educational.interactivityactivaes
lom.educational.typicalAgeRangeadultoses

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