ABSTRACT

It is widely agreed that the post-16 curriculum in England and Wales is inadequate, mainly due to the successive reforms of various governments.
YTS was a reaction to problems of youth unemployment, CPVE and BTEC embraced a 'broad' concept of vocationalism, and even with the introduction of NVQ and GNVQ the A-level retains its gold-standard in the eyes of many. The post-16 curriculum that has emerged is hardly coherent. So how can teachers translate an externally imposed curriculum into a meaningful learning experience for students?
Drawing on solid research in post-16 education, this book makes explicit the nature of flaws in policy, and provides an account of how teachers and students construct their roles. It puts forward the case for a radical reappraisal and identifies appropriate aims and organising principles for a post-16 curriculum for the future.
Martin Bloomer is currently Dean of the Faculty of Education at Exeter University.

chapter 1|12 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 2|25 pages

THE CONTEXT OF EDUCATIONAL PRACTICE

chapter 4|25 pages

KNOWLEDGE AND LEARNING IN PRACTICE

Vocational courses

chapter 5|28 pages

KNOWLEDGE AND LEARNING IN PRACTICE

A-level chemistry courses

chapter 6|21 pages

KNOWLEDGE AND LEARNING IN PRACTICE

A-level history courses

chapter 7|20 pages

STUDENTSHIP AND LEARNING CAREERS

chapter 8|25 pages

TOWARDS A RECONSTRUCTION OF THE POST-16

chapter 9|24 pages

TOWARDS A CURRICULUM FOR THE FUTURE