Re Imagining Comparative Education

Re Imagining Comparative Education
Author: Peter Ninnes,Sonia Mehta
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2004-06-09
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781135935146

Download Re Imagining Comparative Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The original essays included here, by up and coming scholars in the field, illustrate the potential and diversity of post-foundational ideas as applied to comparative education concerns.

Re Imagining Comparative Education

Re Imagining Comparative Education
Author: Peter Ninnes,Sonia Mehta
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2004-06-09
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781135935153

Download Re Imagining Comparative Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book provides clear and concise discussions of key elements of contemporary social theories and their application to the field of comparative education.

Reimagining Japanese Education

Reimagining Japanese Education
Author: David Blake Willis,Jeremy Rappleye
Publsiher: Symposium Books Ltd
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2011-05-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781873927519

Download Reimagining Japanese Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Sparked by the confluence of accelerating domestic transformation and increasingly explicit impacts from ‘globalization’, the Japanese education system has undergone tremendous changes during the turbulence of the past decade. This volume, which brings together some of the foremost scholars in the field of Japanese education, analyzes these recent changes in ways that help us ‘reimagine’ Japan and Japanese educational change at this critical juncture. Rather than simply updating well-worn Western images of Japan and its educational system, the aim of the book is a much deeper critical rethinking of the outmoded paradigms and perspectives that have rendered the massive shifts that have taken place in Japan largely invisible to or forgotten by the outside world. This ‘reimagining’ thus restores Japan to its place as a key comparative link in the global conversation on education and lays out new pathways for comparative research and reflection. Ranging widely across domains of policy and practice, and with a balance of Japanese and foreign scholars, the volume is also indicative of new directions in educational scholarship worldwide: approaches that center global interactions on domestic education and contribute to a far greater recognition of the polycentric, polycontextual World unfolding today. This book will be of keen interest to scholars of education worldwide, as well as those working in and across anthropology, sociology, policy studies, political science, and area studies given that contemporary transformations in Japan at once reflect and approximate political, social, and educational shifts occurring throughout the World in the early decades of the 21st century.

Comparative and International Education

Comparative and International Education
Author: Karen Elizabeth Mundy
Publsiher: Canadian Scholars’ Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: Comparative education
ISBN: 1551303337

Download Comparative and International Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This comprehensive new text explores major issues in education today through international and intercultural research. The contributors draw on comparative research from North America, Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East, and touch on themes including history and philosophy of comparative education, the right to education, teacher formation, alternative pedagogies, testing, multiculturalism, gender, conflict resolution, and global citizenship. Offering a vivid portrayal of global educational practices, contributions from preeminent scholars, and invaluable teaching resources, this text is vital reading for teachers, teachers-in-training, and comparative education scholars.

Re imagining Educational Futures in Developing Countries

Re imagining Educational Futures in Developing Countries
Author: Emmanuel Mogaji,Varsha Jain,Felix Maringe,Robert Ebo Hinson
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 317
Release: 2022-02-14
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9783030882341

Download Re imagining Educational Futures in Developing Countries Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book explores the challenges and precarity of higher education post-pandemic, explicitly focusing on higher education in emerging countries. Looking beyond the pandemic, the editors and contributors provide a holistic view of the residual legacies of global health crises like COVID-19 in developing countries. The book calls for the need to reimagine, reevaluate and reposition the higher education system: exploring the challenges experienced by students, staff, administrators and other stakeholders. Bringing forth insights from researchers, practitioners and senior leadership, the book shares theoretical and practical insights on dealing with the aftermath of a pandemic and what can be learned for the future. It will be of interest and value to researchers, practitioners and leaders who wish to understand a develop new approaches for their teaching and management post-pandemic.

Reimagining Teaching in Early 20th Century Experimental Schools

Reimagining Teaching in Early 20th Century Experimental Schools
Author: Alessandra Arce Hai,Helen May,Kristen Nawrotzki,Larry Prochner,Yordanka Valkanova
Publsiher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2020-08-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 303050963X

Download Reimagining Teaching in Early 20th Century Experimental Schools Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book considers the diffusion and transfer of educational ideas through local and transcontinental networks within and across five socio-political spaces. The authors examine the social, political, and historical preconditions for the transfer of “new education” theory and practices in each period, place, and school, along with the networks of ideas and experts that supported this. The authors use historical methods to examine the schools and to pursue the story of the circulation of new ideas in education. In particular, chapters investigate how educational ideas develop within contexts, travel across boundaries, and are adapted in new contexts.

Reimagining Utopias

Reimagining Utopias
Author: Iveta Silova,Noah W. Sobe,Alla Korzh,Serhiy Kovalchuk
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 8
Release: 2017-07-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9789463510110

Download Reimagining Utopias Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Reimaginig Utopias explores the shifting social imaginaries of post-socialist transformations to understand what happens when the new and old utopias of post-socialism confront the new and old utopias of social science. This peer-reviewed volume addresses the theoretical, methodological, and ethical dilemmas encountered by researchers in the social sciences as they plan and conduct education research in post-socialist settings, as well as disseminate their research findings. Through an interdisciplinary inquiry that spans the fields of education, political science, sociology, anthropology, and history, the book explores three broad questions: How can we (re)imagine research to articulate new theoretical insights about post-socialist education transformations in the context of globalization? How can we (re)imagine methods to pursue alternative ways of producing knowledge? And how can we navigate various ethical dilemmas in light of academic expectations and fieldwork realities? Drawing on case studies, conceptual and theoretical essays, autoethnographic accounts, as well as synthetic introductory and conclusion chapters by the editors, this book advances an important conversation about these complicated questions in geopolitical settings ranging from post-socialist Africa to Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The contributors not only expose the limits of Western conceptual frameworks and research methods for understanding post-socialist transformations, but also engage creatively in addressing the persisting problems of knowledge hierarchies created by abstract universals, epistemic difference, and geographical distance inherent in comparative and international education research. This book challenges the readers to question the existing education narratives and rethink taken-for-granted beliefs, theoretical paradigms, and methodological frameworks in order to reimagine the world in more complex and pluriversal ways.

Re Imagining Doctoral Writing

Re Imagining Doctoral Writing
Author: Cecile Badenhorst,Brittany Amell,James Burford
Publsiher: CSU Open Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2021
Genre: Dissertations, Academic
ISBN: 1646422716

Download Re Imagining Doctoral Writing Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

"Re-imagining Doctoral Writing explores doctoral writing within a context where doctoral education is undergoing enormous transformation. Despite the importance attributed to doctoral writing for developing scholars, we have a limited understanding of the extent to which conceptualizations of doctoral writing are shared or contested, how ideas of doctoral writing have shifted over time, or where imaginings of the future of doctoral writing might take us. Drawing on historical studies that show how understandings of doctoral writing and doctoral writers have changed over time-as well as considering how doctoral writing has changed as we have moved into the 21st century-the contributors to this volume pursue these areas and explore what might happen if we begin thinking about doctoral writing without imagining a vast absence in front of us. By proceeding from a place in which doctoral writing is seen as a rich and increasingly deep area of scholarship, this book offers tools and approaches that expand and enliven conceptions of what doctoral writing might become and how it might be researched"--