Activities per year
Abstract
Decolonising the curriculum has been trending as a term in education. This has been given greater attention in academia following the huge waves of Black Lives Matter protests across the world during the summer of 2020. Where has the term come from? How is it being interpreted today in education? What is next for this concept in teacher education policy and practice? This symposium explores all of these questions, through three papers that share evidence-based research for
decolonising curriculum knowledge in Poland, Norway, and the UK. My introduction to this symposium will provide insight to the conceptions of our broader international collaborations from which these samples of papers are drawn, including the theoretical and evidenced based foundations that frame the criticality in our thinking and arguments (Mignolo, 2013; Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2013; Moncrieffe, 2020, 2022). Each of the papers in this symposium will argue for the
reconceptualization of teacher education policy and the decolonising of curriculum knowledge. The plenary to this symposium will provide discussion opportunity to consider how the reconceptualising of national curricula from narrow ethnic exclusivity to broader ethnic inclusivity can provide sense and meaning to teachers with equitable classroom teaching and learning practices, thus serving to challenge racial inequalities in the systems and structures of European societies.
decolonising curriculum knowledge in Poland, Norway, and the UK. My introduction to this symposium will provide insight to the conceptions of our broader international collaborations from which these samples of papers are drawn, including the theoretical and evidenced based foundations that frame the criticality in our thinking and arguments (Mignolo, 2013; Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2013; Moncrieffe, 2020, 2022). Each of the papers in this symposium will argue for the
reconceptualization of teacher education policy and the decolonising of curriculum knowledge. The plenary to this symposium will provide discussion opportunity to consider how the reconceptualising of national curricula from narrow ethnic exclusivity to broader ethnic inclusivity can provide sense and meaning to teachers with equitable classroom teaching and learning practices, thus serving to challenge racial inequalities in the systems and structures of European societies.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 77 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 11 Apr 2022 |
Event | TEPE 2022 Conference - University of Graz, Austria.: Enhancing the value of teacher education research: Implications for policy and practice - University of Graz, Graz, Austria Duration: 11 Apr 2022 → 13 Apr 2022 https://teacheredu-policy-europe2022.uni-graz.at/en/ |
Conference
Conference | TEPE 2022 Conference - University of Graz, Austria. |
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Country/Territory | Austria |
City | Graz |
Period | 11/04/22 → 13/04/22 |
Internet address |
Keywords
- Decolonising
- Curriculum
- Teacher education
- Transformative Multicultural Education
- Participatory Action Research
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South West of England Institute for Teachers - SWIFT Autumn Curriculum Forum 2022.
Moncrieffe, M. (Participant)
6 Oct 2022Activity: Events › Outreach and Public Engagement
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University of Edinburgh, Moray House, School of Education and Sport RIGEN Race and Inclusivity in Global Education Network Launch
Moncrieffe, M. (Keynote speaker)
9 Sept 2022Activity: External talk or presentation › Oral presentation
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Teach First Symposium 'Equity, Diversity and Decolonising the Curriculum'
Moncrieffe, M. (Keynote speaker)
14 Jun 2022Activity: External talk or presentation › Invited talk