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July 2020 Vol.
7 No.1
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Merit Research Journal of Art, Social Science
and Humanities (ISSN: 2350-2258) Vol. 7(1) pp.
001-008, July 2020
Copyright © 2020 Merit Research Journals
DOI:
10.5281/zenodo.3966410 |
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Review
From Birth Till Death: A Narrative Analysis of the Evolution of
Curriculum Issues in Cameroon Education System Before
Independence and Reunification |
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Department of Curriculum Studies ad
Teaching, Faculty of Education, University of Buea
*Corresponding Author's E-mail: lukongemms_20@yahoo.com
Received:
08 July 2020
I Accepted:
20
July 2020
I Published: 29
July 2020
I
Article ID: MRJASSH-20-011
Copyright © 2020 Author(s) retain the
copyright of this article.
This article is published under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution
License 4.0. |
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Cameroon
educational development has continued to be a subject of
numerous national and international debates since the
introduction of formal education in the country in 1844 till
date. The question that is usually asked and has received
varying response is what type of education for Cameroonian
Schools. While educational experts have provided responses to
this question from several perspectives very few studies have
addressed the issue for a responsive curriculum making from the
lens of curriculum change and planning at the different levels
of schools on which considerable efforts have been made in
providing quality education since the introduction of formal
education. One way of doing this is to go back to the historical
evolution of curriculum issues in Cameroon as a starting point
in charting a part way for a responsive curriculum that
appropriately addresses the current need of the individual and
society. The study argues that the evolution of education in
pre-colonial and colonial Cameroon was characterized by the
curriculum concepts of continuity, change and resistance to
change. Using the narrative approach, the study attempts to
articulate the arguments in discussing the historical evolution
of the educational development with respect to pre-colonial
curriculum issues, colonial curriculum issues, education under
the German protectorate, education in French occupied Cameroon,
and education in the British occupied Cameroons.
Keywords: Curriculum, Relevance, Continuity, Change,
Resistance to Change, Colonial Indigenous, Education System,
Cameroon
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