Social justice and the National Curriculum
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Research Papers in Education
- Vol. 5 (3) , 203-227
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0267152900050302
Abstract
This paper, first presented at the British Educational Research Association Conference 1 1 This is a revised version of a paper presented to the annual conference of the British Educational Research Association, Newcastle Unversity, September 1989. View all notes at Newcastle University in September, 1989, reports the results and analysis of documentary research that examined the first four National Curriculum documents to be made public: the TGAT Report and the Mathematics, Science and English Reports. It considers, in particular, the 1988 Education Reform Act's reconceptualization of schooling and the associated process of curriculum reformulation in relation to issues of social justice. First, it explores the historical background and current context of equal opportunities in education noting what has been achieved so far. Then it examines how social justice has been addressed in the 1988 legislation by providing a textual analysis of TGAT, and the Mathematics, Science and English documents. Third, it identifies the assumptions underlying current official thinking in order to explore, finally, the strategies needed to place social justice on the educational agenda of the 1990s. It focuses, in particular, on what have been seen as the two main debates about social justice in British education in the late 1980s ‐those concerning sexual and racial inequality.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The construction and deconstruction of educational policy documentsJournal of Education Policy, 1988
- How do the A‐level Science Grades of Integrated Science Pupils Compare with those of Pupils who take All Three Separate Sciences?British Educational Research Journal, 1988