我们的学校,我们的身份:自1961年以来喀麦隆英语教育子系统历史课程改革的努力和挑战

R. Ndille
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在经历过殖民统治的国家,历史教学在其历史的不同时期受到了严格的审查。政界人士和教育技术专家都对历史课程的内容表示担忧,他们质疑作为历史教授的内容与坐在教室长凳上的学生的相关性。在喀麦隆,尤其是以英语为母语的教育体系,这场辩论远未结束,尽管这个国家的命运掌握在那些与殖民主义抗争了50多年的人手中。本文的出发点是,1961年以来的殖民课程不符合新国家的实际情况。因此,大家一致认为课程改革应注重地方和民族内容的教学。通过采用批判性的非殖民化视角和生活理论方法,该研究将历史作为殖民当局用来巩固殖民主义的科目之一(Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2013;马斯登,2013;罗德尼,1982;Fanon, 1963),因此迫切需要后殖民改革。该研究通过展示1916年至1961年间英属南喀麦隆殖民地历史课堂上的知识,考察了英语教育子系统在多大程度上实现了这一目标。接着论述了喀麦隆独立以来英语教育子系统历史课程改革的进程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Our schools our identity: efforts and challenges in the transformation of the history curriculum in the Anglophone subsystem of education in Cameroon since 1961
The teaching of history in countries that have experienced colonisation has come under serious scrutiny at different times in their history. Worries about the contents of history programmes have been raised by politicians as well as educational technocrats who question the relevance of what is being taught as history to those on the classroom pews. In Cameroon, and particularly for the Anglophone subsystem of education, this debate is far from over despite the fact that the destiny of the country has rested in the hands of those who fought against colonialism for over fifty years now. This paper emanates from the premise that the colonial curriculum did not meet the realities of the new country since 1961. Consequently, there was a consensus of opinion that curriculum reform should focus on the teaching of local and national contents. By adopting the critical Decolonial perspective and living theory methodology the study focuses on history as one of those subjects which was used by the colonial authorities to entrench coloniality (Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2013; Marsden, 2013; Rodney, 1982; Fanon, 1963) and was therefore in dire need of postcolonial reform. The study examines the extent to which this has been achieved in the Anglophone subsystem of Education by presenting what was learnt in the colonial history classroom in the British Southern Cameroons between 1916 and 1961. It then goes on to discuss the process of reform in the History curriculum of the Anglophone subsystem of education in Cameroon since independence.
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