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Curriculum Making: A Conceptual Framing; Mark Priestley, Stavroula Philippou, Daniel Alvunger, Tiina Soini Chapter 1. National Curriculum Making as More or Less Expressions of and Responses to Globalization; Bob Lingard Chapter 2. 'Sites' of Curriculum Making in Cyprus: Tracing the Emergence and Transformation of EXPERT Teacher-Subjects; Stavroula Kontovourki, Eleni Theodorou, Stavroula Philippou Chapter 3. The Ongoing Curriculum Reform in Portugal: Highlighting Trends, Challenges and Possibilities; Ana Mouraz, Ariana Cosme Chapter 4. Post-Socialist Curricular Reform in Czechia: Multiple Actors and Their Blame Games; Dominik Dvorak Chapter 5. Integral Curriculum Review in the Netherlands: In Need of Dovetail Joints; Nienke Nieveen, Wilmad Kuiper Chapter 6. The Case of Curriculum Development in England: Oases in a Curriculum Desert?; Gemma Parker, David Leat Chapter 7. Curriculum Reform in Scottish Education: Discourse, Narrative and Enactment; Walter Humes, Mark Priestley Chapter 8. The Craft of Curriculum Making in Lower Secondary Education in Ireland; Majella Dempsey, Audrey Doyle, Anne Looney Chapter 9. Understanding Transnational Curriculum Policies and Curriculum Making in Local Municipal Arenas - The Case of Sweden; Daniel Alvunger, Ninni Wahlstrom Chapter 10. Shared Sense-making as Key for Large Scale Curriculum Reform in Finland; Tiina Soini, Kirsi Pyhalto, Janne Pietarinen Conclusions: Patterns and Trends in Curriculum Making in Europe; Daniel Alvunger, Tiina Soini, Stavroula Philippou, Mark Priestley
'Europe is a rich site for comparative analysis of curriculum making, and this book provides a new perspective and a wealth of studies on different actors and influences. It is a prime resource for students of curriculum.'
'This is one of the most interesting and important books on curriculum for a very long time. The editors have drawn together an international group of highly regarded teachers and academics to produce well-written and insightful case studies of curricular reform in nine European countries. This book provides a rationale, an incentive, and evidence (negative and positive) for doing things better. It should be read by actors at all levels in education systems.'
'With its implications for policy and practice that go beyond traditional rigid educational policy texts, this book is essential reading for higher education students pursuing educational doctorates. The chapters offer a powerful corrective that empowers teacher and schools alike with making curriculum relevant to the experiences of students, and point our attention to translational and transactive processes that are otherwise ignored not only in educational policy literature, but in educator discourse. This book does a great service in (re)inscribing curriculum as a truly dynamic process in accessible language. As a curricularist who engages with education policy, I believe this work provides valuable theoretical and research material detail. For those who are interested in thinking the curriculum anew, I suggest that Curriculum Making in Europe be placed be at the top of the reading list.'