CI 47(3) is now available online →
Issue 47(3) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, Tracing and countering the "hidden", by Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández.
Issue 47(3) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, Tracing and countering the "hidden", by Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández.
Issue 47(2) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, On knowledge and knowing, by Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández and Alexandra Arráiz Matute.
CI currently has two calls for papers for upcoming special issues.
Issue 47(1) Curriculum Inquiry's special issue on the Curriculum of Global Migration and Transnationalism is now available online, with a free access editorial, Shifting borders and sinking ships: What (and who) is transnationalism "good" for? by Elena v. Toukan, Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández and Sardar Anwaruddin.
The Editors of Curriculum Inquiry are pleased to invite nominations for the 2017 Curriculum Inquiry Writing Fellowship (CIWF) and Writer’s Retreat, to be held in conjunction with the 2017 Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (CSSC) in Savannah, GA, June 11th to the 17th. Up to six Fellows will be selected to participate in a three-day writer’s retreat and workshop, culminating in a panel presentation at the CSSC conference and potential publication in a special issue of Curriculum Inquiry.
CI currently has two calls for papers for upcoming special issues.
Issue 46(4) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, Youth subjectification and resistance in the settler state by Shawna Marie Carroll & Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández
The Editors of Curriculum Inquiry in collaboration with the Guest Editors are seeking manuscripts for a special issue that is scheduled for publication in the Fall of 2017. “Educative Practices and the Making of (Non) Citizens,” aims to feature the work of established and emerging scholars from a variety of academic fields and disciplines that explore critical approaches to understanding citizenship using a diverse range of methodological and theoretical frameworks. This interdisciplinary special issue aims to theorize relationships between citizenship and the interstices of educational spaces. Accordingly, we envision a special issue focused on the multiplicity of roles that education takes up with regards to citizenship. Click here for full description and details ...
CI's special issue, The Child in Question, features articles written with the aim of interrogating discursive constructions of and about children. The issue is introduced through an editorial written by guest editors Dr. Lisa Farley and Dr. Julie C. Garlen, The Child in Question: Childhood texts, cultures, and curricula.
There will be a launch of this special issue at the Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative Conference in Savannah, Georgia, on Friday, June 10. Several of the authors, as well as the guest editors, will participate in a panel discussion from 6:30-8:30 pm.
Issue 46(2) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, “We're all stories in the end”: on the narratives that (un)make us by Associate Editor, Alexandra Arráiz Matute
In this issue we make space for new and emerging scholars in the field of curriculum studies. In this special issue, new scholars (re)view texts and the field at large in our contemporary post/next moment. These works are introduced through an editorial written by editors Sardar M. Anwaruddin and Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández in which they consider the slippages surrounding the act of reading and (re)viewing.
Issue 45(5) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial, The unruly curricula of the ruling classes, by Leila Angod, and the following articles:
The “Human Problem” in educational research: Notes from the psychoanalytic archive
by Lisa Farley
Embodying “Britishness”: The (re)making of the contemporary Nigerian elite child
by Pere Ayling
Elite rationalities and curricular form: “Meritorious” class reproduction in the elite thinking curriculum in Singapore
by Leonel Lim and Michael W. Apple
Mind the civic empowerment gap: Economically elite students and critical civic education
by Katy Swalwell
The Editors of Curriculum Inquiry (CI) invite proposal submissions for Special Issues. CI is a leading international journal in the field of curriculum studies. It is dedicated to studies of educational experience in schools, communities, families, and other local or transnational settings, using a range of theoretical and disciplinary approaches. CI brings together the work of both established and emerging scholars from a variety of academic fields and disciplines who theorize and examine curriculum and pedagogy, broadly defined, and whose work promotes conceptual debate and pushes beyond current understandings of educational research, theory, and practice.
The journal invites proposals for special issues that explore and critique contemporary ideas, issues, trends, and problems in education, particularly those relating to curriculum, teaching and learning, teacher education, cultural practice, and educational research and policy. We are interested in special issues that invite authors to tackle cutting edge issues or that bring new insight into some of the perennial questions and issues related to curriculum inquiry broadly defined.
Issue 45(4) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available online, with a free access editorial by Neil T. Ramjewan & Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández and the following articles:
Conflations, possibilities, and foreclosures: Global citizenship education in a multicultural context
by Karen Pashby
Texturing space-times in the Australian curriculum: Cross-curriculum priorities
by David Peacock, Robert Lingard & Sam Sellar
The role of ideology and habitus in educational media production
by Jeremy Stoddard
Bad kids and bad feelings: What children's literature teaches about ADHD, creativity, and openness
by Clio Stearns
Thank you to everyone who submitted papers in response to our call for our upcoming special issue, "The Child in Question". Guest editors Lisa Farley and Julie Maudlin are looking forward to putting together an interesting issue with a wide range of authors.
Just under three more months before the August 15 deadline to submit manuscripts for this exciting issue, with guest editors Lisa Farley and Julie Maudlin - more information on the call for papers
Issue 45(3) of Curriculum Inquiry is now available, with a free access editorial by Editor-in-Chief Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández and articles by Elizabeth de Freitas and Matthew Curinga, Wolff-Michael Roth and Jean-Françoise Maheux, Julianne Lynch and Sandra Herbert, Ann Lawrence, and Deborah Brandt. Enjoy!