Journal for Peace and Justice Studies

Volume 24, Issue 2, 2014

Peace, Justice, and Education

Dr. Katerina Standish, Heather Kertyzia
Pages 73-99

Looking for Peace in the English National Curricula

Does school teach peace? School is a place where we learn values and attitudes - a transmission belt - a social institution that can generate common standards and moral ideals from how we learn (pedagogy) and what we learn (curriculum). This mixed-method analysis utilizes directive (qualitative) and summative (quantitative) content analysis to scrutinize the national curricular statements of England (Early Years Learning and Stage 1-4) to explore whether three elements common in peace education programs appear: recognition of violence (direct, structural or cultural); addressing conflict nonviolently; and, creating the conditions of positive peace. It finds limited evidence in both documents that the English National Curriculum contains content conducive to creating positive peace, minimal content that transmits techniques for transforming conflict nonviolently, and, despite abundant examples of violent acts, there is either no recognition of violence (Stage 1-4) or primarily nominal references to direct violence (Early Learning).