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288 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2014
Although in most settings curriculum trundles along its traditional tracks, many teachers in many schools have gotten uppity, pushing hard on the boundaries of what’s usually taught. There are at least six broad trends—I call them the six beyonds: Beyond basic skills—twenty-first-century skills and dispositions. There’s a global trend toward cultivating critical and creative thinking, collaborative skills and dispositions, leadership, entrepreneurship, and related skills and dispositions that speak strongly to living and thriving in our era. Beyond the traditional disciplines—renewed, hybrid, and less familiar disciplines. Here we find attention to such themes as bioethics, ecology, recent ideas from psychology and sociology, and other areas that address the opportunities and challenges of our times. Beyond discrete disciplines—interdisciplinary topics and problems. Many curricula introduce students to daunting contemporary problems of an emphatically interdisciplinary character, for instance, the causes and possible cures of poverty or the trade-offs of different energy sources. Beyond regional perspectives—global perspectives, problems, and studies. Here we find attention not just to local or national but also to global matters, for instance, world history or the global interactive economic system or the possible meanings of global citizenship. Beyond mastering content—learning to think about the world with the content. Educators are encouraging learners not just to master content academically but also to notice where content connects to life situations, yields insights, and prompts productive action. Beyond prescribed content—much more choice of what to learn. In some settings, educators are supporting and coaching learners in choices about what to study well beyond the typical use of electives.