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Bob Adamson

Researcher at University of Hong Kong

Publications -  79
Citations -  2075

Bob Adamson is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Curriculum & China. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 76 publications receiving 1922 citations. Previous affiliations of Bob Adamson include Queensland University of Technology & Hong Kong Institute of Education.

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Book

China’s English: A History of English in Chinese Education

Bob Adamson
TL;DR: The authors traces the history of English education in the People's Republic of China from 1949 to the present day using the junior secondary school curriculum as the means to examine how English curriculum developers and textbook writers have confronted the shifting ambiguities and dilemmas over five distinct historical periods.
Book

Comparative Education Research: Approaches and Methods

TL;DR: The second edition of as mentioned in this paper contains thoroughly updated and additional material, which contributes new insights within the longstanding traditions of the field of comparative education, including a focus on intra-national as well as cross-national comparisons, highlighting the value of approaching themes from different angles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The English Curriculum in the People's Republic of China

TL;DR: The authors traces the career of the English curriculum in China since 1949, with particular reference to the junior secondary school curriculum, through an analysis of the national syllabus and textbooks and identifies five distinct periods and analyses the major forces of curriculum change, the dynamics of curriculum design, and the principal features of models for change in each of the periods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barbarian as a foreign language: English in China’s Schools

TL;DR: The authors examined the shifting role and status of the English language within social, economic and political contexts in China from a historical perspective in order to understand and explain state educational policy regarding the language and argued that, since the mid-nineteenth century, the government of China has avoided the potential pitfalls of cultural transfer by adopting a strategy of selective appropriation under state control.
Book

Curriculum, Schooling and Society in Hong Kong

Paul Morris, +1 more
TL;DR: The book presents a specific analysis of the Hong Kong school curriculum and highlights the ways in which the curriculum both reflects and changes in response to broader socio-political shifts.