Curriculum Studies in India examines Indian scholars in dialogue regarding their intellectual life histories and subjective investments in their field. With chapter introductions by William Pinar, scholars explore their intellectual history and present circumstances of curriculum studies in India, emphasized by their own engagement and research. These works demonstrate the rapidity and scale of economic growth today, and how it creates conflict, dislocation, inequality, and ‘echoes’ of a colonial past now present in globalization. Pinar and his contributors conclude that historical (dis)continuities, cultural conflict, economic globalization, and political tension characterize the present circumstances of curriculum studies in India.
İçerik tablosu
1. Curriculum in India: Narratives, Debates and a Deliberative Agenda; Poonam Batra 2. Schooling as Counter-Socialization: Krishna Kumar’s Contributions to Curriculum; Mary Ann Chacko 3. An Intellectual History and Present Circumstances of Curriculum Studies in India; Suresh C. Ghosh 4. Curriculum Studies in India: Colonial Roots and Postcolonial Trajectories; Manish Jain 5. School Curriculum in India; Meenakshi Thapan 6. The Exchanges; William F. Pinar 7. Curriculum Studies in India; William F. Pinar 8. The Final Word; Meenakshi Thapan 9. Epilogue; Poonam Batra
Yazar hakkında
Poonam Batra, University of Delhi, India Mary Ann Chacko, Columbia University, USA Suresh C. Ghosh, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India Manish Jain, Ambedkar University, India Meenakshi Thapan, University of Delhi, India