The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana

This paper presents findings from a two-year ethnographic study that explored how institutional politics shaped the curriculum of a graduate program in instructional communication in a Ghanaian public university. Using Porter et al.’s (2000) idea of institutional critique, the research showed that t...

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Main Author: Wincharles Coker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athens Institute for Education and Research 2018-10-01
Series:Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2018-4-4-2-Coker.pdf
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spelling doaj-a7f9fa90234948eab73a86508651f00e2021-02-25T13:59:12ZengAthens Institute for Education and ResearchAthens Journal of Mass Media and Communications2407-94992018-10-014426528610.30958/ajmmc.4-4-2The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana Wincharles Coker0Lecturer, Department of Communication Studies, University of Cape Coast, GhanaThis paper presents findings from a two-year ethnographic study that explored how institutional politics shaped the curriculum of a graduate program in instructional communication in a Ghanaian public university. Using Porter et al.’s (2000) idea of institutional critique, the research showed that the design of the program was not value-free. The analysis indicated that the curriculum as a textual material promotes preferred literacies that reflect ideologies and core values of its designers. The study found that the instructional communication curriculum is anchored on competencies in applied linguistics and educational psychology. The research advocates the opening of a space crucial for including "new" seminars such as instructional communication, composition studies, and critical theory to the curriculum. The paper makes the case that these new seminars are important for training communication educators to be abreast of the exigencies of the twenty-first century educational enterprise.https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2018-4-4-2-Coker.pdfcommunicationcurriculumeducationinstitutionpolitics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wincharles Coker
spellingShingle Wincharles Coker
The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
communication
curriculum
education
institution
politics
author_facet Wincharles Coker
author_sort Wincharles Coker
title The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
title_short The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
title_full The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
title_fullStr The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed The Politics of Curriculum Design in Instructional Communication in Ghana
title_sort politics of curriculum design in instructional communication in ghana
publisher Athens Institute for Education and Research
series Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
issn 2407-9499
publishDate 2018-10-01
description This paper presents findings from a two-year ethnographic study that explored how institutional politics shaped the curriculum of a graduate program in instructional communication in a Ghanaian public university. Using Porter et al.’s (2000) idea of institutional critique, the research showed that the design of the program was not value-free. The analysis indicated that the curriculum as a textual material promotes preferred literacies that reflect ideologies and core values of its designers. The study found that the instructional communication curriculum is anchored on competencies in applied linguistics and educational psychology. The research advocates the opening of a space crucial for including "new" seminars such as instructional communication, composition studies, and critical theory to the curriculum. The paper makes the case that these new seminars are important for training communication educators to be abreast of the exigencies of the twenty-first century educational enterprise.
topic communication
curriculum
education
institution
politics
url https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2018-4-4-2-Coker.pdf
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