z-logo
Premium
Curriculum in conflict: how African American and Indigenous educational thought complicates the hidden curriculum
Author(s) -
Pratt Alexander B.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the curriculum journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1469-3704
pISSN - 0958-5176
DOI - 10.1080/09585176.2019.1661862
Subject(s) - curriculum , hidden curriculum , curriculum theory , indigenous , curriculum studies , ideology , sociology , emergent curriculum , focus (optics) , epistemology , pedagogy , curriculum development , curriculum mapping , political science , politics , law , ecology , philosophy , physics , optics , biology
This article is a discussion of the hidden curriculum and the settler‐colonial erasure that it propagates. There are two guiding questions that focus this work: (1) what are the assumptions that underlie the concept of the hidden curriculum and what do those assumptions obscure or erase; and (2) having raised the first question, is there a way forward for hidden curriculum analysis that can address the still valid concerns about tacit ideological messages in public schools without repeating the original constituting displacement of the hidden curriculum? I will employ a comparative analysis of select literature most commonly associated with the concept of the hidden curriculum and writings on education by Feminist, Black and Indigenous leaders and thinkers that speak to its ideas in a way that broadens and complicates its construction. I conclude this article with a discussion of the potential implications of these altered understandings for teacher and researcher practice.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom