School curriculum since apartheid : intersections of politics and policy in the South African transition
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Date
Authors
Jansen, Jonathan D.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
In the wake of South Africa's first non-racial elections in 1994, the new Minister of Education launched a national process which would purge the apartheid curriculum of its most offensive racial content and outdated, inaccurate subject matter. At a first glance these essential alterations to school syllabuses sounded reasonable and timely, given the democratic non-racial ideals of the new government. However, these syllabus alterations had little to do with changing the school curriculum and much more to do with a precarious crisis of legitimacy facing the state and education in the months following the national elections. The haste with which the state pursued a superficial cleansing of the inherited curriculum is explained in terms of the political constraints, conflicts and compromises which accompanied the South African transition from apartheid.
Description
Keywords
Curriculum development, Educational policy, Apartheid, Political influences, Educational change, Political interference
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Jansen, J D 1999, ‘The school curriculum since apartheid: intersections of politics and policy in the South African transition’, Journal of Curriculum Studies, vol. 31, issue 1, pp. 57-67. [http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/00220272.asp]