This article discusses the Educational Reform held in Brazil during the military dictatorship period (1964-1985) taking it as a point of reflection to discuss the curriculum changes and the history of school subjects: Social Studies; Civic and Moral Education (CME) and Organization of Social Policies in Brazil (OSPB), which confer a new configuration to the teaching of humanities in the context of an authoritarian Pedagogy whose emphasis was on the triad of "forming", "cultivating", "disciplining". Producing from a literature review, the author analyzes the reform curriculum as the attempt of the military state to produce instruments aiming at the pitch of consciousness to the established power.
Educational Reform; curriculum; school subjects; Brazilian military dictatorship; humanities teaching and learning