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The politics are personal: <i>The Australian</i> vs the Australian curriculum in history
12
Citations
5
References
2012
Year
Curriculum InquiryConservative NewspaperPolitical TheoryHistory CurriculumPolitical ProcessEducationPolitical BehaviorMedia StudiesSocial SciencesJournalismPolitical CommunicationMedia InstitutionsAustralian CurriculumPolitical CultureJournalism HistorySocial Foundations Of EducationPolitical AttitudesSocial FoundationsAggressive ConservatismArtsPolitical SciencePublic Debate
This article reviews the relationship between the conservative newspaper The Australian and the development of a national history curriculum in Australia. The lead author surveyed the major Australian press in the five‐year period between 2007 and 2012 and found clear patterns of difference between The Australian and other press outlets in relation to education in general and history curriculum in particular. Using Jonathan Haidt%s five‐point model of moral values, the article analyses the behaviour of the press in Australia in relation to history education as a feature of moral preferences. Extending from this analysis, it then highlights a number of cases of press campaigns in The Australian targeted against individuals including one academic involved in the development of a national curriculum. The article demonstrates that a culture of aggressive conservatism exercised in this Murdoch press outlet reaches beyond the field of conventional political debate to constitute a serious and concerning influence in the dynamics of curriculum policy development.
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