ABSTRACT

This volume presents a mix of translations of classical and modern papers from the German Didaktik tradition, newly prepared essays by German scholars and practitioners writing from within the tradition, and interpretive essays by U.S. scholars. It brings this tradition, which virtually dominated German curricular thought and teacher education until the 1960s when American curriculum theory entered Germany--and which is now experiencing a renaissance--to the English-speaking world, where it has been essentially unknown.

The intent is to capture in one volume the core (at least) of the tradition of Didaktik and to communicate its potential relevance to English-language curricularists and teacher educators. It introduces a theoretical tradition which, although very different in almost every respect from those we know, offers a set of approaches that suggest ways of thinking about problems of reflection on curricular and teaching praxis (the core focus of the tradition) which the editors believe are accessible to North American readers--with appropriate "translation." These ways of thinking and related praxis are very relevant to notions such as reflective teaching and the discourse on teachers as professionals. By raising the possibility that the "new" tradition of Didaktik can be highly suggestive for thinking through issues related to a number of central ideas within contemporary discourse--and for exploring the implications of these ideas for both teacher education and for a curriculum theory appropriate to these new contexts for theorizing, this book opens up a gold mine of theoretical and practical possibilities.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

Starting a Dialogue

A Beginning Conversation Between Didaktik and the Curriculum Traditions

part 1|42 pages

Didaktik as a Reflective Practice

chapter 1|25 pages

Teaching as a Reflective Practice

What might Didaktik Teach Curriculum?

chapter 2|14 pages

German Didaktik

Models of Re-Presentation, of Intercourse, and of Experience

part 3|85 pages

Sources from the Didaktik Tradition

chapter 9|15 pages

Teaching to Understand

On the Concept of the Exemplary in Teaching

chapter 10|17 pages

Content

Still in Question

part 4|140 pages

Didaktik as Praxis

chapter 14|16 pages

Reflecting as a Didaktik Construction

Speaking about Mathematics in the Mathematics Classroom

chapter 17|24 pages

Open Experimenting

A Framework for Structuring Science Teaching and Learning