How do we internationalize that which is deeply provincial and national? Situating our focus on and interest squarely within curriculum studies, how do we internationalize without imperializing or imposing old, colonial, and so-called âFirst Worldâ conceptualizations of education on teaching, learning, and curriculum? Let us not anticipate simple answers to such complex questions. Being under no illusion that we hold Solomonic wisdom, we editors turned to the wisdom of others. A curricular response to such pedagogical questions is this edited volume. In it, we called on contributors to speak and write from their cultural, linguistic, and national locations, from the places they know best. We invited them to grapple with these questions in an increasingly globalized world while also thinking through the general and particular tasks of curriculum theorists (Derrida 2000).
We present this volume as a dialogic tapestry where our discursive exchanges are taken up as complicated conversations (Pinar et al. 1995). In turn, such conversations, as the chapters in the volume make clear, are suggestive of two dialogic frameworks. The first uses history to complicate local and global understandings of curriculum theorizing. The second involves a radical push of curriculum theorizing toward (re)imagining a better future that promises, without promise, bringing into existence that which is yet to come. Internationally oriented conversations start, as Pinar (2010) suggests elsewhere, at the national level where the ânation-stateâ continues to be a territorial and political domain from which important and consequential educational reforms are made and in turn need to be understood. For Pinar, the project of âinternationalization denotes the possibility of nationally distinctive fields in complicated conversations with each otherâ (p. 3). But why understand the tasks of curriculum theorists in relation to internationalization versus globalization?
In Curriculum Studies as an International Conversation, Johnson-Mardones (2018) reminds us that the potential of thinking through the concept of internationalization âis not limited to âmoving beyond the nationâ in order to reconstruct the national narrative or to reformulate a national cannon; it also includes the exploration of international conversations as in-between scholarly spacesâ (p. 5). Despite the critiques, Hardt and Negri (2000) tell us, globalization cannot be reduced to not one thing. For them, âthe multiple [curricular and pedagogical] processes that we recognize as globalization are not unified or univocalâ (p. 219). With this in mind, this collection seeks to understand the localâwith its history, environment, and critiqueâas the starting point for different disciplinaryâvertical and horizontalâdimensions of an internationalization of curriculum studies in relation to globalization (Pinar 2015). How might we recognize the analytical and synthetical tensions and possibilities between internationalization and globalization, and how can we root (route) our differing international approaches for studying, or better yet understanding, a concept we call curriculum? This is what we are calling, to lean on Huebnerâs term, âthe task of the curriculum theoristâ: to think through and re/direct the familiar into new, and more hopeful educational and societal directions.
In a time of uncertainty, as education becomes increasingly corporatized, monetized, and de-intellectualization, in the form of alt-right politics, continues to grow and be further embedded in public consciousness, the need to think through the task of the curriculum theorist is becoming more urgent than ever (Epstein 2016; Spring 2015). In light of (or sitting in the dark shadows caused by) Islamophobia, police brutality, hate-fueled attacks, and refusals to respond to the injustices that have been inflicted upon Indigenous communities across the globe, we began this work in careful consideration. We came together, from different parts of the world, to attend the International Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies Conference (IAACS) in May 2015. People spoke from their own accentuated political stances, listened to one another with a sense of loving humility, and tried to rearticulate and reimagine what Huebner (1975/1999) calls language forms and their respective radical possibilities.
It is worth noting that the Ottawa IAACS conference was the fifth iteration of our gathering together. The first iteration of this conference began 15 years ago at Louisiana State University. At that time, a community of curriculum scholars congregated to âtalk about issues in curriculum, hearing what people do, how they do it, [and] how they think about thingsâ with the hope that we could learn from each other (Trueit 2003, p. ix). Like Aoki (2000/2005) suggested then, the IAACS and its associated conference provided a potential space to âgenerate newness and hopeâ (p. 457). Then titled The Louisiana State University Conference on the Internationalization of Curriculum Studies, it was organized with the intention of both âencourag[ing] the internationalization of curriculum studiesâ and calling on curriculum theorists to âcontribute to the formation of a world-wide field of curriculum studiesâ (Pinar 2003, p. 1). At this first gathering, Pinar (2003) offered the following cautionary note:
Despite the bitterness and our despair over the development in the schools, many of us Americans still exude a naĂŻve, if more than occasionally imperialistic, confidence that âthe world is ours.â Of course this is nonsense, but somewhere in the American unconsciousness such nonsenses is it seems, always at work. (p. 4)
Since then, the conference has been held triennially, hosted by universities in China (2003), Finland (2006), South Africa (2009), and Brazil (2012). In December of 2018, the conference will be held in Australia.
Forty-five years prior to this triennial gathering, in his groundbreaking article, Dwayne Huebner (1975/1999) first thought through The Tasks of the Curriculum Theorist. Huebner challenged readers to reconceptualize the field of curriculum studies as a space for multiplicity, recognizing the variety of shapes and forms various curricular phenomena, research about said phenomena, and the language we ascribe to them could assume. He tasked us with the following three areas for our future field of study: history, the environment, and critique. This collection is organized around these three areas, and we expand upon each briefly. First, when it came to history, Huebner argued, process and continuity were at the forefront of our conversations. And in many ways, they still are. For Huebner, we always need to ground ourselves in a time and a place so that we know where we come from and where we are going. This is what we are calling âhistories,â in the plural, because history can never be singular interpretation of our relationships with the past. Consequently, there are as many histories as there are interpreters and interpretations. Huebner stressed then, that what has begun is never quite finished, while at the same time reminding us of our allegiances to the past, in terms of tracing our intellectual histories within their particular and partial contextual states.
Huebner (1975/1999) also warned against a tendency toward ahistorical curriculum studies, a proneness for being âmessianicâ in the adoption of ânew and permanent vehicles of salvationâ positioned as âthe only and only best way to talk about curricular phenomenaâ (p. 218). âTo be aware of our historical nature,â he continued, âis to be on top of our past, so we can use it as a base for projection into the futureâ (p. 218). Considering his comment in light of current global challenges, this projection need not be linear; tracing a clear line from past to present may not be possible, or indeed, desirable. Instead, projection might be interpreted as a metaphysical force, a movement or motion that disrupts certain ascendant historical logics while advancing alternative narratives. Here, we are looking not to âdraw forth old solutionsâ but rather to be pushed as he put it, âto new levels of awarenessâ (p. 221).
Second, beyond a more general grounding of curricular work, Huebnerâs (1975/1999) tasks for curriculum theorists extend to an engagement with what he labels the âenvironmentâ of education, consisting of both the places of educationâinside and outside of the schoolâand subjective experiences within these spaces. To fully understand Huebnerâs approach to the âenvironment,â which is the second pillar of this book, we need to distinguish between the âschoolâ (as the place, the geography, the building) and âschoolingâ (as the experiences people have in that place, what they do in it, and in turn what the place does to them). The building does not determine peopleâs lived experiences but rather is directly related to them. Situating curriculum theory, in part, within Huebnerâs âenvironmentâ might help us understand and in many ways reverse the process of alienation that detaches âthe individual from the history of the situationâ and makes challenging the aforementioned process of change and growth (p. 223). Locating our selves in relation to others and spaces aids in the recognition of curriculum as a âform of human praxis, a shaping of the worldâ (p. 226) that requires reaching out, drawing from, and contributing to an active, political, and aesthetic community committed to imaging the world around us anew.
The third and final pillar of the book is centered around what Huebner calls âcritique.â Huebner (1975/1999) tasks curriculum theorists with a continued responsibility for conducting research as a means of determining the viability and vitality of institutions by âsubjecting [them] to empirical and social criticism appropriate to given historical communitiesâ (pp. 227â228). Apart from institutions, we might consider Huebnerâs move toward research as an effort to ground the field in a type of critique, wherein its language, form, and function are placed under the microscope. As he explains, âthe empirical critique determines the adequacy of the form for the facts [and] the social critique determines the adequacy of the form in terms of the logical, esthetic, economic, and political values of usersâ (p. 227). Today, such callings upon curriculum theorists may ground our curriculum inquiries, while also moving them toward a reconceptualization of our practices and policies in particular spaces, opening up larger theoretical questions of how we might create spaces, in curriculum studies, for new ways of sitting with and thinking through both general and particular curricular issues.
Inspired by Huebnerâs (1975/1999) call to reconsider the tasks of the curriculum theorist, the 2015 meeting of IAACS provided an opportunity for our community to examine more closely what it might mean to curriculum theorize in the present time, in a moment of crisis; to reconsider what it might mean to live hopefully, radically, ethically, and lovingly with one another, across borders that are becoming increasingly real and more difficult to traverse (Lear 2008); to imagine what it might mean to open up new spaces, and to âlook at things as if could be otherwiseâ (Greene 1995, p. 19). These complicated conversations were conducted through a variety of ever-expanding interpretive traditions: historical, political, racial, gendered, phenomenological, post-structural/deconstructive/postmodern, (auto)biographical, aesthetic, theological, institutional, international, environmental, indigenous, postcolonial, and cosmopolitan. The chapters offered in this collection represent a move to ground curriculum studies as an international conversation. While grounding connotes a certain permanence when considering the etymology of the termâsolidifying a foundation, constructing a firm basis, or rooting downâthe chapters call attention to the possibilities for multiplicity suggested through rerouting (re-rooting) our conceptions of curriculum studies.
Turning to Others: What to Expect in What Follows
In the first section, âGrounding Curricular Histories,â the authors invite us to reconsider different historical conversations within the field of curriculum studies. Christou and De Luca offer a brief history of the movement in curriculum studies frequently referred to as reconceptualization. Identifying three tensions in the current state of the fieldâcontemporaneity, discursive balkanization, and methodological diffusionâthey challenge curriculum scholars to open up curricular spaces, to consider âwho is able to participate in the conversation, how that conversation is referenced, the degree of coherence within the conversation, and the value and function of the conversationâ (p. 29). Quinn and Christodoulou unearth curriculum by constructing an alternative world devoid of curriculum theory, examining its presence through absence. Describing curriculum theory as âthe interdisciplinary study of educational experience, involving [an] extraordinarily complicated conversation,â they recount their histories in curriculum theory, calling attention to both the historical roots that ground them in particular spaces and time and the fecund âcross-fertilizingâ space between them (p. 36). In so doing, curriculum theory becomes a generative force of nourishment, one that has the potential to both maintain and transform.
Moreira and Ramos provide an important histor...