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    Hidden Curriculum

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    Running head: Hidden Curriculum; Forces That Impact Instruction Hidden Curriculum; Forces That Impact Instruction S. Duncan University of Phoenix EDD 558 Jennifer Wordell Monday‚ June 12‚ 2006 Hidden Curriculum; Forces That Impact Instruction Students who go to college to become teachers are taught a general course of subject matter that when they become teachers they will teach to their students. They are given new ways to teach the same curriculum that has been

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    The Hidden Curriculum

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    The hidden curriculum American Marxist economists and sociologists Bowles and Gintis (1976) believed that through education there is a “Hidden Curriculum” which helped to achieve the objectives of the capitalists. (To provide capitalists with a hardworking‚ subservient‚ docile and obedient work force.) The hidden curriculum consists of those things that pupils learn through the experience of attending school‚ not educational objectives. Bowles and Gintis state that the hidden curriculum shapes

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    Hidden Curriculum

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    Hidden Curriculum Education is designed to serve many purposes towards the youths of today. It teaches the youth how to be better people and it prepares them for life. Education teaches its pupils knowledge in more that one way‚ by looking at life in different directions. There is a curriculum that is taught by the teachers and the textbooks‚ and in addition to the standard schooling there is also a "hidden curriculum." Gatto and Rose each have their own style of teaching and learning and their

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    Hidden Curriculum

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    HIDDEN CURRICULUM What education is only to implement the written curriculum alone‚ with other words‚ the means of measuring educational outcomes in the form of mastery learning solely by students? The question is what has drawn the interest of educational researchers to examine the values‚ beliefs‚ school climate‚ and other learning experiences that included all of the curriculum and is known as implied.  The result of our reading and study‚ to date‚ there is a consensus among the leaders

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    Hidden Curriculum

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    The Hidden Curriculum The hidden curriculum is a well-recognised element of education. The term is often accredited to Philip W. Jackson as it was first coined in his publication “Life in classrooms” (1968) however the theory had been present in education for some time before‚ philosopher John Dewey had experimented with the idea in some of his early 20th century works. It deals with the covert area of curriculum. This piece will first and foremost explore the idea of curriculum beyond subjects

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    Hidden Curriculum

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    family and peers‚ dramatic playtime‚ and even television. While many social skills are taught‚ there are some that are learned through observations and encounters. These skills‚ or rules‚ are also known as the “hidden curriculum‚”

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    K-12 classrooms. However‚ while the classroom materials advance and new methods of teaching trickle in‚ there is still a problem. As Jean Anyon (1980) would point out‚ “there exists a hidden curriculum in the classroom”. This idea resides in the fact that while schools are advancing there is an issue‚ a hidden curriculum‚ in which students are taught according to their social class. This idea reinforces the class struggle that Karl Marx had become an advocate for. The idea that capitalism only contributes

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    curricula. One is the open curriculum‚ which we are already familiar with. The other curriculum‚ the hidden one‚ often has the greatest impact on an adolescent boy or girl. It is the hidden curriculum that molds self-esteem‚ aids or hinders confident social development‚ that helps make high school a time of pleasant memories‚ or turns the high school experience into an ordeal.’ (Ruby Ausbrooks‚ Ed.D.) http://www.parentingteens.com/curriculum.shtml The phrase ’hidden curriculum’ was coined by Brian Jackson

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    Outline and explain what is meant by the Hidden Curriculum in schools [20] There are a few things that you need to pay attention to here. You must: Outline what different perspectives say about the hidden curriculum Use relevant examples /evidence Explain them The hidden curriculum is a phrase used to describe the things learnt in school that are not openly taught in lessons or examined in tests. In general the hidden curriculum is a type of socialisation which involves persuading people either

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    Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum In the essay Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work‚ by Jean Anyon‚ the education of five different schools with four different economic classes is examined. The samples examined were two working-class schools‚ one middle-class school‚ one affluent professional school‚ and one executive elite school. The author compares the five sample schools’ curriculums and shares his findings in detail. The first schools he writes about are the two working-class

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