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Embedding Values and Attitudes in Curriculum

Shaping a Better Future

image of Embedding Values and Attitudes in Curriculum

For the first time, the OECD Future of Education and Skills 2030 project conducted comprehensive curriculum analyses through the co‐creation of new knowledge with a wide range of stakeholders including policy makers, academic experts, school leaders, teachers, NGOs, other social partners and, most importantly, students. This report is one of six in a series presenting the first‐ever comparative data on curriculum at the content level summarising existing literature, examining trends in curriculum change with challenges and strategies, and suggesting lessons learned from unintended consequences countries experienced with their curriculum reforms.

This report highlights how clearly articulated and experienced values and attitudes can support students’ positive lifelong learning outcomes and promote a more equitable and just society. Despite the variety of values espoused in national curricula, there is an emerging trend in prioritising values that enhance well-being and learning across different countries. This report acknowledges that incorporating values and attitudes in curriculum design and implementation does not come without its challenges – values and attitudes can be intensely contested constructs. However, it also examines the desire by authorities to see curriculum reflecting future-focused goals to improve society as a stronger imperative for countries/jurisdictions than the challenges presented. This report offers strategies that can support effective design and implementation.

English

Cultivating positive attitudes and values in a learning ecosystem

Students develop values and attitudes within a learning ecosystem – formally, informally and non-formally. They learn through the formal school curriculum, but also through their peers and teachers at school, from siblings and parents at home, and from others with whom they interact in the community. This chapter explores the role of “hidden curriculum” in fostering students’ attitudes and values. It also introduces a curriculum redesign framework, which illustrates how various levels of the curriculum ecosystem interact with each other and impact design, content and implementation. This framework provides a model of how attitudes and values can be introduced and, in turn, influence the development of students’ beliefs, values, dispositions and behaviours. It also looks at data, research findings and shared experiences that can support the development of students’ attitudes and values, as well as personal perspectives on the values and attitudes students and teachers believe a holistic education should provide.

English

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