Change and Continuity in British columbian Perspectives as Illustrated in Social Studies Textbooks from 1885 to 2006
Date
2014-06-03
Authors
Broom, Catherine
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New York: Berghahn
Abstract
This paper presents an overview of British Columbia’s (B.C.) educational history
interweaved with descriptions of textbooks. Focusing on social studies textbooks, this article
explores change and continuity in the history of public schooling, paying attention to whether
citizens were conceptualized as active, passive, or patriotic citizens. It identifies four key
periods: the establishment of public schools in B.C., the rise of the progressivist movement in
the 1930s and reaction to it, advocacy of Bruner’s structure of disciplines in the 1960s, and
pendulum swings in philosophic orientations in the latter part of the twentieth century. The
article illustrates connections between contemporary philosophies and textbooks, and
identifies continuity and change in the content and aims of the textbooks.
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