Curriculum Reform for Social Justice: A Critical Policy Historiography of Transformation in Lesotho, Zimbabwe and South Africa

G. Chimbi, L. Jita
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Abstract

The call for social justice in education has been echoed across the globe for many decades. However, the dual hatchets of racial and social-class segregation have refused to be buried in the 21st century. Inequalities within and across nations remain pervasive and conspicuous. Tapping into the framework of policy genealogy, this theoretical qualitative historiography teases the evolution of curriculum reform in three post-colonial states – Lesotho, Zimbabwe and South Africa. These three nations share a common legacy of British colonialism and unequal access to education anchored in race, social class, gender and other manifestations of injustice. Using primary and secondary documents available in the public domain, the paper traces and juxtaposes post-colonial curriculum policies initiated in search for social justice and how these policies were implemented at school and classroom levels. The grounded theory emerging from this policy historiography is that the genealogy of curriculum reform policies was dictated by historical circumstances and the unique context of each country, rather than deliberate policy sharing among decision-makers in the three post-colonial states. Although reform policy espouses equitable education, the attainment of social justice in the three nations remains largely a mirage. Only children of the new Black elite are enjoying the fruits of post-colonial curriculum reform by attending expensive and generously resourced former White-only schools, but the poor majority remain marginalised in poorly resourced schools. This study recommends collaboration among policy makers in the three nations so that policy talk may be translated into policy action.
促进社会公正的课程改革:莱索托、津巴布韦和南非改革的批判性政策史学
几十年来,全球一直在呼吁教育的社会公正。然而,在 21 世纪,种族和社会阶层隔离的双重烙印仍未被埋葬。国家内部和国家之间的不平等依然普遍存在,而且十分明显。本理论性定性史学利用政策谱系框架,对莱索托、津巴布韦和南非这三个后殖民国家的课程改革演变进行了研究。这三个国家有着共同的英国殖民主义遗产,以及基于种族、社会阶层、性别和其他不公正表现形式的不平等教育机会。本文利用公共领域的主要和次要文件,追溯并并列了为寻求社会公正而启动的后殖民课程政策,以及这些政策在学校和课堂层面的实施情况。从这一政策史学中得出的基本理论是,课程改革政策的谱系是由历史环境和每个国家的独特背景决定的,而不是三个后殖民国家的决策者之间有意共享的政策。尽管改革政策倡导公平教育,但在这三个国家实现社会公正在很大程度上仍然是海市蜃楼。只有黑人新精英的子女才能享受到后殖民时期课程改革的成果,进入费用昂贵、资源丰富的前白人学校就读,但大多数穷人仍在资源贫乏的学校中被边缘化。本研究建议三个国家的政策制定者开展合作,以便将政策言论转化为政策行动。
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