ABSTRACT

Can the syllabus constitute the curriculum? In this volume, Rocha explores curriculum theory through the lens of the syllabus. By critiquing curriculum studies and the entire field of education, overrun by the social sciences, Rocha provides an integrated vision of philosophy of education and curriculum theory, rooted in the humanities.

Through an original reconceptualization, this text draws from a broad range of sources – ranging from Classical Antiquity to the present – offering a rich context for understanding curriculum as a philosophically salient concept, contained within the syllabus. The Syllabus as Curriculum features actual syllabi created and taught by the author in undergraduate and graduate courses at the University of British Columbia, Canada. These curated syllabi work as exemplars and media, supported by pedagogical commentary and context. Inspired by Augustine’s Confessions, each part of the book culminates in a metaphorical "garden," which serves as a meditation on the syllabus in three senses: correspondence, essay, and outline.

An original, powerful, and corrective contribution to the literature on curriculum studies, this work invites teachers and scholars from across the foundations of education, especially philosophy of education, art education, and those invested in curriculum theory, to see their contribution in more direct and integral ways.

chapter |16 pages

Preface

The Poesis of Teaching

chapter |8 pages

Forethought

Directions, Transition

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Curriculo Perennis, Curriculum Vitae

part One|49 pages

Love

chapter Syllabus One|13 pages

Education, Knowledge, and Curriculum (A–E)

chapter Syllabus Two|2 pages

Philosophy of Education

chapter Syllabus Three|5 pages

Critical Social Theory

chapter Syllabus Four|23 pages

Assorted Letters (A–M)

chapter First Garden|4 pages

Syllabus as Correspondence

part Two|61 pages

Art

chapter Syllabus Five|3 pages

Teaching Philosophy

chapter Syllabus Six|4 pages

Humanities-Based Research

chapter Syllabus Seven|26 pages

Educational Theories (A–C)

chapter Syllabus Eight|23 pages

Ethics (A–C)

chapter Second Garden|3 pages

Syllabus as Essay

part Three|33 pages

Order

chapter Syllabus Nine|5 pages

Eros and Education

chapter Syllabus Ten|2 pages

Pedagogy of the Oppressed Revised, Revisited

chapter Syllabus Eleven|2 pages

Philosophical Research in Education

chapter Syllabus Twelve|17 pages

Customs of Supervision

chapter Third Garden|5 pages

Syllabus as Outline

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Towards a Wounded Curriculum

chapter |8 pages

Afterthought

The Jetsons and Sesame Street

chapter |6 pages

Epilogue

Humanities, What Is It Good For?