Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice

This research explores the slippages between the intended and the operational curricula in relation to understanding and enacting citizenship in a Bangladeshi secondary school. I draw on Pinar‘s (2006) notion of the curriculum as a political text to show that it is Western neoliberal understandings...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alam, Md. Safayet
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Educational Studies and Human Development 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6195
id ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-6195
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-61952015-03-30T15:28:42ZNotions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and PracticeAlam, Md. SafayetThis research explores the slippages between the intended and the operational curricula in relation to understanding and enacting citizenship in a Bangladeshi secondary school. I draw on Pinar‘s (2006) notion of the curriculum as a political text to show that it is Western neoliberal understandings of citizenship that are considered as those 'most worth knowing'. The key themes of this research relate to the tensions between neo-liberal discourses of citizenship and 'critical' approaches to citizenship (Andreotti, 2006) and also relate to the slippages between the intended and operational curricula in terms of citizenship. Using qualitative research methodologies, I have analysed three Bangladeshi curriculum documents and the stated views of citizenship of a group of teachers and students and a principal at the level of the intended secondary curriculum. I have also analysed how competing views of citizenship are played out in practice in the operational curriculum of a high school classroom. The findings show that Bangladeshi secondary education is reproducing Western neoliberal knowledge of citizenship that thwarts opportunities for political subjectivity and agency for critical citizenship.University of Canterbury. Educational Studies and Human Development2012-01-03T21:22:46Z2012-01-03T21:22:46Z2011Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6195enNZCUCopyright Md. Safayet Alamhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description This research explores the slippages between the intended and the operational curricula in relation to understanding and enacting citizenship in a Bangladeshi secondary school. I draw on Pinar‘s (2006) notion of the curriculum as a political text to show that it is Western neoliberal understandings of citizenship that are considered as those 'most worth knowing'. The key themes of this research relate to the tensions between neo-liberal discourses of citizenship and 'critical' approaches to citizenship (Andreotti, 2006) and also relate to the slippages between the intended and operational curricula in terms of citizenship. Using qualitative research methodologies, I have analysed three Bangladeshi curriculum documents and the stated views of citizenship of a group of teachers and students and a principal at the level of the intended secondary curriculum. I have also analysed how competing views of citizenship are played out in practice in the operational curriculum of a high school classroom. The findings show that Bangladeshi secondary education is reproducing Western neoliberal knowledge of citizenship that thwarts opportunities for political subjectivity and agency for critical citizenship.
author Alam, Md. Safayet
spellingShingle Alam, Md. Safayet
Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
author_facet Alam, Md. Safayet
author_sort Alam, Md. Safayet
title Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
title_short Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
title_full Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
title_fullStr Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
title_full_unstemmed Notions of Citizenship in Bangladesh Secondary Curriculum: The Interface between Policy, Perception, and Practice
title_sort notions of citizenship in bangladesh secondary curriculum: the interface between policy, perception, and practice
publisher University of Canterbury. Educational Studies and Human Development
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6195
work_keys_str_mv AT alammdsafayet notionsofcitizenshipinbangladeshsecondarycurriculumtheinterfacebetweenpolicyperceptionandpractice
_version_ 1716798678349381632