“…He identifies four ideological positions borrowed from Imperial Britain, namely "mental disciplinarity, humanism, child study and social efficiency" (London, 2002: 103). Mental discipline is based on the notion that aspects of the mind such as memory, attention, observation, reasoning and will could be trained as muscles to function more effectively (London, 2002) which may be likened to Brookfield's (1975, cited in London, 2002 description of colonization as a "struggle for the mind". Humanism, on the other hand, contributed to the content studied as it placed emphasis on promoting western values in the curriculum such as "(k)nowledge of 'the truth', love of 'beauty' and cultivating the habit of doing 'good'" (London, 2002: 105).…”