the knowledge debate: teachers views steve puttick [email protected]

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The knowledge debate: teachers’ views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education .ox.ac.uk

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Page 1: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

The knowledge debate:teachers’ views

Steve [email protected]

Page 2: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

The knowledge debate…Firth (2007; 2011)Lambert and Morgan (2009; 2011)Lambert (2011)Morgan (2011)Winter (2009; 2012)

Young (2007)

DfE (2010)…

Page 3: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

‘…thinking skills, learning to learn and the emotional dimensions of learning [have] assumed more immediate or urgent attention than a critical gaze on the material content of lessons...’

(Lambert and Morgan, 2011, p.281)

Page 4: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

‘…geographical knowledge has rarely, if ever, figured in such discussion. It has been marginalised by the exigencies of everyday practice and the imperatives of policy’.

(Firth, 2011, p.312)

Page 5: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

‘Why, then, is Geography in such a poor state of health?’ ‘…treats knowledge as a technical phenomenon, devoid of politics and ethics… a reductive, simplistic enterprise’

(Winter, 2009, p.671)

Page 6: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

‘…university Geography has had little influence on school Geography…’

(Winter, 2009, p.672)

Page 7: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk
Page 8: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

“one of the things I would stand strongly by is, I'm not there to impart knowledge, I'm there to facilitate them becoming better learners”.

Greg

Page 9: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk
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Questions for teachers:

• Does the origin of knowledge matter?

• How can epistemological developments in the academic discipline inform the school subject?

• Should they?

Page 13: The knowledge debate: teachers views Steve Puttick steven.puttick@education.ox.ac.uk

References• DfE (2010) The Importance of Teaching. The Schools White Paper 2010, London: DfE• Firth, R. (2007) Geography Teachers, Teaching and the Issue of Knowledge. Nottingham: The

Nottingham Jubilee Press, University of Nottingham.• Firth, R. (2011) ‘Making geography visible as an object of study in the secondary school

curriculum’, Curriculum Journal, 22, 3, pp. 289–316.• Lambert, D. (2011) Reviewing the case for geography, and the 'knowledge turn' in the

English National Curriculum. Curriculum Journal, 22 (2), pp. 243-264.• Lambert, D. and Morgan, J. (2009) Corrupting the curriculum? The case of geography.

London Review of Education, 7 (2), pp. 147-157.• Morgan, J. (2011) ‘Knowledge and the school geography curriculum: a rough guide for

teachers’, Teaching Geography, 36, 3, pp. 90–92• Morgan, J. and Lambert, D. (2011) Editors' introduction. Curriculum Journal, 22 (3), pp. 279-

287. • Young, M. (2007) Bringing Knowledge Back In: From social constructivism to social realism in

the sociology of education. London: Routledge.• Winter, C. (2009) Geography and education 1: the state of the health of Geography in

schools. Progress in Human Geography, 33 (5), pp. 667-676. • Winter, C. (2012) Geography and education II: Policy reform, Humanities and the future of

school Geography in England. Progress in Human Geography, 36 (2), pp. 254-262.• Young, M. (2008) Bringing knowledge back in: From social constructivism to social realism in

the sociology of education. London: Continuum.