Structure and Agency as Two Problematics in School-based Curriculum Development: A Case Study
- 1 November 1986
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Australian Journal of Education
- Vol. 30 (3) , 285-299
- https://doi.org/10.1177/000494418603000306
Abstract
Implicit in the rationale behind the shift from a centre-periphery/systems management approach to a school-based curriculum development (SBCD) approach to curriculum innovation and development are two notions which are viewed here as problematic. The first is that teachers will be ‘free’ to develop curricula which conform to a pedagogic ideal. Based on case-study research, it is argued that this notion must be approached with caution, as it can be shown that, even in a situation where teachers themselves initiate innovation, their actions are constrained by a number of in-school structures. The second notion is that SBCD may be able to overcome problems that occur between the creation and implementation of innovatory programs. However it is argued that individual teachers who are involved in creating an innovative idea also paradoxically interpret this idea in different ways and implement it differently. It is concluded that transformation of innovative ideas is inevitable in any innovatory program, and that this factor may act as a counterbalance to excesses in bureaucratic control sometimes evident in centre-periphery/systems management approaches.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temporal dimensions of an innovative idea: A case study of teacher‐initiated innovationJournal of Curriculum Studies, 1986
- Behind the Teacher's Desk: The Teacher, The Administrator, and the Problem of ChangeCurriculum Inquiry, 1981
- Central Problems in Social TheoryPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1979
- The Adequacy of Systems Management Procedures in EducationThe Journal of Educational Research, 1972