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  • MPI Ethno. Forsch.  (14)
  • 2015-2019  (14)
  • Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands  (14)
  • Education  (14)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands
    ISBN: 9789401793001
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVI, 156 p. 15 illus., 1 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Cultural Studies of Science Education 10
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Hewson, Mariana G. Embracing indigenous knowledge in science and medical teaching
    Keywords: Medical Education ; Science Study and teaching ; Education ; Education ; Medical Education ; Science Study and teaching ; Südafrika ; Volksmedizin ; Lokales Wissen ; Wissensvermittlung
    Abstract: This book describes the gaps and commonalities in African and Western ways of knowing concerning science and medicine. It reflects a personal journey in teaching science and trans-cultural medicine in the African setting. In addition, it describes how the author became an initiate as a traditional healer in Zimbabwe. The book combines educational theory, research and lived experiences of teaching in southern Africa with the ideas of the indigenous healers of the region. Incorporating new knowledge of African indigenous knowledge and traditional healers, the book provides insights about, and suggestions for teaching and caring that are both surprising and energizing for our future
    Description / Table of Contents: PrologueChapter 1: Different Ways of Knowing -- SECTION B: SCIENCE EDUCATION -- Chapter 2: History of Science Teaching in Southern Africa -- Chapter 3: Teaching Science in Southern Africa -- SECTION C: MEDICAL EDUCATION AND PRACTICE -- Chapter 4: Challenges of Medicine Across the Cultural Divide -- Chapter 5: African Healing and Traditional Healers -- Chapter 6: Educating Traditional Healers -- SECTION D: IMPLICATIONS FOR SCIENCE AND CLINICAL TEACHING -- Chapter 7: Research on Indigenous Knowledge in South Africa and Lesotho -- Chapter 8: Integrating Indigenous Knowledge with Science Teaching -- Chapter 9: Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge into Clinical Teaching -- SECTION E: FINALE -- Chapter 10: Epilogue -- VIDEO: We Can Teach the Children -- Index.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789401794961
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (X, 289 p. 50 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Science History ; Biology Philosophy ; Science Study and teaching ; Education ; Education ; Science History ; Biology Philosophy ; Science Study and teaching
    Abstract: This book celebrates dioramas as a unique and essential learning tool for biological education for all. It provides information about their historical development, the technique of taxidermy and diorama construction from the past and the modern developments as well as aspects of interpretation and learning processes. The fresh and unique compilation brings together experts from a number of different countries, from the west coast of the USA, across Europe to China. It describes the journey of dioramas from their inception through development to visions of their future. A complementary journey is that of visitors and their individual sense making and construction of their understanding from their own starting points, often interacting with others (e.g. teachers, peers, parents) as well as media (e.g. labels). Dioramas have been, hitherto, a rather neglected area of museum exhibits but a renaissance is beginning for them and their educational importance in contributing to people’s understanding of the natural world. This volume shows how dioramas can reach a wide audience and increase access to biological knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction, Sue Dale Tunnicliffe, London (UK) & Annette Scheersoi, Bonn (D)I. History and Features of Natural History Dioramas -- I.1 History of Dioramas, Claudia Kamcke, Braunschweig, & Rainer Hutterer, Bonn (D) -- I.2 Dioramas as historical documents, Rainer Hutterer, Bonn (D) -- I.3 A window on the world - wildlife dioramas, Pat Morris, Ascot (US) -- I.4 Dioramas as constructs of reality: Art, photography, and the discursive space, Geraldine Howie (UK) -- I.5 James Perry Wilson: Shifting paradigms of natural history diorama painting, Michael Anderson, Yale (US) -- II. Resurrecting and Modern Dioramas -- II.1 Dioramas in Natural History Museum - Tools for nature conservation, John Borg, Mdina (MT) -- II.2 Using technology to deepen and extend visitor’s interaction with dioramas, Mark Loveland, Barbara Buckley & Edys Quellmalz, WestEd (US) -- II.3 Displaying Ecological Landscapes by Dioramas - an example provided by Zhejiang Museum of Natural History, Ximin Kang, Zhejiang (CHN) -- II.4 Conservative restoration and reconstruction of historical Natural History Dioramas, Mareike Munsch, Hartmut Schmiese, Aleksandra Angelov, Gunnar Riedel & Jörn Köhler, Darmstadt (D) -- III. Learning at dioramas -- III.1 Dioramas as important tools in biological education, Sue Dale Tunnicliffe & Annette Scheersoi -- III.2 Catching the visitor’s interest, Annette Scheersoi -- III. 3 Naming and narratives at dioramas, Sue Dale Tunnicliffe -- III.4 The evolution of the narrative at natural history dioramas, Alix Cotumaggio, New York (US) -- III.5 Imaginary places: Museum visitor perceptions of habitat dioramas, Phaedra Livingstone, Oregon (US) -- III.6 Habitat dioramas and sense of place: Factors linked to visitors’ feelings about the natural places portrayed in dioramas, Cecilia Garibay & Eric D. Gyllenhaal, Chicago (US) -- III.7 The Human connection: Enactors and the facilitated diorama experience, Kathleen Tinworth, Denver (US) -- III.8 Storytelling and performance in diorama galleries, Keith Dunmall, Birchington on Sea (UK) -- III.9 The diorama as a means for biodiversity education, Martha Marandino, Sao Paolo (Brazil), Marianne Achiam, Copenhagen (DK) & Adriano Oliveira, Sao Paolo (Brazil) -- III.10 Interpreting through drawings, Edward Mifsud, Malta (MT) -- Conclusion, Michael Reiss, London (UK).
    Note: Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9789400741652
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVIII, 254 p. 2 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Policy Implications of Research in Education 5
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Globalization, international education policy and local policy formation
    Keywords: Education ; Education ; Entwicklungsländer ; Bildungspolitik ; Entwicklungspolitik ; Internationaler Vergleich ; Globalisierung ; Ausbildung ; Weltgesellschaft ; Bildung ; Bildungssystem ; Bildungspolitik
    Abstract: This volume examines how international donor policy and funding affect local educational policy formation in developing countries and regions. Consisting of research and commentary on primary, secondary and tertiary education by scholars from developing countries around the world, it represents a seldom-heard voice. The viewpoints offered here are surprisingly varied and refreshingly divergent from much of the usual Western discourse on international educational policy formation and implementation. Starting out with an overview of the history and current condition of international donor policy, the book leaves ample room for voices from the developing world in its ten chapters that make up the second part. It concludes with a tentative discussion of theory of collaboration. The volume contributes to the global attempts at collaboration between donor and recipient countries as it presents a perspective not often heard in the clamour of voices of Western experts and local government officials
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 1 Giving Voice to Local Scholars in Educational Policy, Carolyn A. BrownPart I - Historical Background and Current Status of International Donor Policy in Education -- Chapter 2 A Brief History of International Education Policy: From Breton-Woods to the Paris Declaration, James H. Williams -- Chapter 3 Current Trends in Education & Development, James H. Williams, Carolyn A.Brown and Sarah Kwan -- Part II - Voices from the Developing World -- Chapter 4 Differential Support, Divergent Success: Three Case Studies of International Influence on Education Policy in El Salvador, D. Brent Edwards Jr., Pauline Martin and  Julián Antonio Victoria Libreros -- Chapter 5 Education for all and the Global-Local Interface: A Case Study of The Gambia, Matarr Baldeh and Caroline Manion -- Chapter 6 Nordic aid and the Education Sector in Africa: The Case of Tanzania, Zehlia Babaci-Wilhite, Macleans A. Geo-JaJa and Mwajuma Vuzo -- Chapter 7 Quality with equity in primary education: Implications of high stakes assessments on teacher practice in Bangladesh, Jaddon Park and Manzoor Ahmed -- Chapter 8 No Nation is an Island: Navigating the Troubled Waters Between Indigenous Values and Donor Desire in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Paul Robert Sauer -- Chapter 9 Education and Gender Rights in Latin America, Ezequiel Gomez Caride -- Chapter 10 Where to From Here?  Analysis of Cambodia's 2009-2013 Information Communication Technologies in Education Plan, Jayson W. Richardson, John B. Nash, Lyda Chea and Chivoin Peou -- Chapter 11 International Aid Influences on South African Policy Development in Education and Training, Peliwe Lolwana -- Chapter 12 A View from Latin America: Two Generations of Reforms on Higher Education; Towards a New Decade of Collaboration, Jorge Uribe-Roldán -- Chapter 13 Global and Local: Standardized Testing and Corruption in Admissions to Ukrainian Universities, Ararat L. Osipian -- Part III - Toward a Theory of Collaboration -- Chapter 14 Can There be Real Collaboration Between Donors and Developing Countries in Educational Policy? Conclusions and Recommendations, Carolyn A. Brown.
    Note: Includes index
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9789401795708
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVI, 492 p. 58 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: Higher Education Dynamics 44
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Education ; Education
    Abstract: In spite of the increasing attention attributed to the rise in prominence of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) countries, few studies have looked at the ways in which broader social expectations with respect to the role of higher education across the BRICS have changed, or not, in recent years. Our point of departure is that, contrary to the conventional wisdom focusing on functionalistic perspectives, higher education systems are not just designed by governments to fulfill certain functions, but have a tendency for evolving in a rather unpredictable fashion as a result of the complex interplay between a number of internal and external factors. In reality, national higher education systems develop and change according to a complex process that encompasses the expectations of governmental agencies, markets, the aspirations of the population for the benefits of education, the specific institutional traditions and cultures of higher education institutions, and, increasingly so, the interests and strategies of the private firms entering and offering services in the higher education market. This basically means that it is of outmost importance to move away from conceiving of "universities" or "higher education" as single, monolithic actors or sector. One way of doing this is by investigating a selected number of distinct, but nonetheless interrelated factors or drivers, which, taken together, help determine the nature and scope of the social compact between higher education (its core actors and institutions) and society at large (government, industry, local communities, professional associations)
    Description / Table of Contents: IntroductionThe Rise of the BRICS and Higher Education Dynamics. Simon Schwartzman, Rómulo Pinheiro and Pundy Pillay -- Part I: Thematic Summaries -- Demand and Policies for Higher Education. Simon Schwartzman -- The Role of Internal and External Stakeholders. Rómulo Pinheiro -- Linking University Research and Innovation in the BRICS. Creso M. Sá -- Part II: Supply and Demand -- Demand and Supply for Higher Education in Brazil. Clarissa E. B. Neves -- Supply and Demand Patterns in Russian Higher Education. Isak Froumin and Yarolslav Kuuzminov -- Higher Education, Social Demand and Social Equity in India. Kishore M. Joshi --  Demands and Responses in Chinese Higher Education. Yuzhuo Cai and Fengqiao Yan.-Supply and Demand in South Africa. Kirti Menon.-Part III: The Role of Stakeholders -- The Role of Internal and External Stakeholders in Brazilian Higher Education. Elizabeth Balbachevsky -- Russian System of Higher Education and its Stakeholders: Ten years on the way to congruence. Evgeny Kniazev and Drantusova Natalya -- Cost Sharing in China’s Higher Education: Analyses of Major Stakeholders. Rui Yang -- The Role of Stakeholders in the Transformation of the South African Higher Education System. Peliwe Lolwana -- Part IV: Government Policy -- Higher Education policies in Brazil: A Case of Failure in Market Regulation. Maria H. M. Castro -- The Federal State, Regional Interests and the Reinvention of Russian Higher Education. Mark S. Johnson -- The Complex Web of Policy Choices: Dilemmas Facing Indian Higher Education Reform. Roopa D. Trilokekar and Sheila Embleton -- The Chinese Model of Development and the Higher Education Policy. Qiang Zha and Ruth Hayhoe -- State Power, Transition and New Modes of Coordination in Higher Education in South Africa. Michael Cross -- Part V: Research and Innovation -- Research and the ‘Third mission” in Light of Global Events. Creso M. Sá, Andrew Kretz and Kristjan Sigurdson -- Globalization and the Research Mission of Universities in Russia. Anna Smolentseva -- Research and Innovation in Indian Higher Education. Radhika Gorur and Fazal Rizvi -- Promoting Entrepreneurship and Innovation in China: Transformations in University Curriculum and Research Capacity. Joshua K. H. Mok and Kan Yue -- Research and Innovation in South Africa. Pundy Pillay -- EPILOGUE: Higher Education in the BRICS: What Have We Learnt and Where Are We Heading? Rómulo Pinheiro, Simon Schwartzman and Pundy Pillay.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9789400777934
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIII, 412 p. 30 illus., 20 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Mathematics ; Science Study and teaching ; Education, Higher ; Engineering ; Education ; Education ; Mathematics ; Science Study and teaching ; Education, Higher ; Engineering
    Abstract: Drawing on data generated by the EU’s Interests and Recruitment in Science (IRIS) project, this volume examines the issue of young people’s participation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. With an especial focus on female participation, the chapters offer analysis deploying varied theoretical frameworks, including sociology, social psychology, and gender studies. The material also includes reviews of relevant research in science education, and summaries of empirical data concerning student choices in STEM disciplines in five European countries. Featuring both quantitative and qualitative analyses, the book makes a substantial contribution to the developing theoretical agenda in STEM education. It augments available empirical data and identifies strategies in policy-making that could lead to improved participation-and gender balance-in STEM disciplines. The majority of the chapter authors are IRIS project members, with additional chapters written by specially invited contributors. The book provides researchers and policy makers alike with a comprehensive and authoritative exploration of the core issues in STEM educational participation
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: Participation in science and technology education - presenting the challenge and introducing project IRISSection 1:Theoretical perspectives on educational choice -- Chapter 1: Expectancy-value perspectives on STEM choice in late-modern societies -- Chapter 2. A narrative approach to understand students’ identities and choices -- Chapter 3: Gender, STEM studies and educational choices. Insights from feminist perspectives -- Section 2: Interest and participation in STEM from primary school to phD -- Chapter 4: STEM attitudes, interests and career choice -- Chapter 5: Science aspirations and gender identity: Lessons from the ASPIRES project -- Chapter 6: The impact of science curriculum content on students’ subject choices in post-compulsory schooling -- Chapter 7: A place for STEM: Probing the reasons for undergraduate course choices -- Chapter 8: Short stories of educational choice - in the words of science and technology students -- Chapter 9: Understanding declining science participation in Australia: A systemic perspective -- Chapter 10: Choice patterns of PhD students: why should i pursue a PhD? -- Chapter 11: The impact of outreach and out-of-school activities on Norwegian upper secondary students’ STEM motivations -- Section 3: Staying in STEM, leaving STEM? -- Chapter 12: Why do students in stem higher education programmes drop/opt out? Explanations offered from research -- Chapter 13: What makes them leave and where do they go? Non-completion and institutional departures in STEM -- Chapter 14: The first-year experience: Students’ encounter with science and engineering programmes -- Chapter 15: Keeping pace. Educational choice motivations and first-year experiences in the words of Italian students -- Section 4: Applying feminist perspectives to understand STEM participation -- Chapter 16: When research challenges gender stereotypes: Exploring narratives of girls’ educational choices -- Chapter 17: Italian female and male students’ choices: STEM studies and motivations -- Chapter 18: Being a woman in a man’s place or being a man in a women’s place: insights into students’ experiences of science and engineering at university -- Chapter 19: Italian students’ ideas about gender and science in late modern societies. interpretations from a feminist perspective -- Section 5: Understanding and improving STEM participation: Conclusions and recommendations -- Chapter 20: Understanding student participation and choice in science and technology education: The contribution of IRIS -- Chapter 21: Improving participation in science and technology higher education: Ways forward -- Appendix: The IRIS questionnaire: Brief account of instrument development, data collection and respondents.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9789400742406
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (IX, 330 p. 110 illus., 12 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Cultural Studies of Science Education 12
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    DDC: 303.483
    Keywords: Science Study and teaching ; Social sciences Methodology ; Education ; Education ; Science Study and teaching ; Social sciences Methodology
    Abstract: The chapters included in this book address two major questions: what are some of the methodological and theoretical issues in sociocultural research in urban education and science education and what sort of questions do technological and virtual contexts raise for these types of research perspectives. The chapters build off Ken Tobin's personal history of sociocultural research in science education and as they do each chapter asks philosophical, sociological and/or methodological questions that inform our understanding of the challenges associated with conducting research in experiential and virtual contexts
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction, Catherine MilneSection 1: The Experiential in Education Research -- 1 The sociocultural turn in Science Education and its transformative potential, Kenneth Tobin -- 2 Multilectics and its methods, Gene Fellner -- 3 Heuristics for mindfulness in education and beyond, Malgorzata Powietrzynska -- 4 Studying secondary science student teaching experiences within a cohort community of practice: A multi-planar, multi-analysis sociocultural methodology, Jennifer Gallo-Fox -- 5 Video selection and microanalysis approaches in studies of Urban Science Education, Rowhea Elmesky -- 6 Equity, ethics and engagement: Principles for quality formative assessment in primary science classrooms, Bronwen Cowie -- 7 “And? Did we do nice things?” Children documenting their emerging inquiries in early science learning, Charles Max, Christina Siry, Martin Kracheel -- 8 Coteaching in the Penn STI: Evolution of fluent praxis, Cristobal Carambo -- 9 Science and English language learners:  Creating opportunities to align teaching and learning with students’ needs, Gillian U. Bayne and Romil D. Amin -- 10 Being a science educator researcher: a personal narrative from a sociocultural perspective, Konstantinos Alexakos -- Section 2 - The Virtual and the Real in Education Research -- 11 Conceptualizing identity in Science Education research: Theoretical and methodological issues, Lilian Pozzer-Ardenghi  Phoebe A. Jackson -- 12 A socio-culturally sensitive science curriculum: What does it have to do with our bodies? Giuliano Reis -- 13 Youth media productions: Deconstructing “difference” or reifying norms? Donna DeGennaro  Tiffany L. Brown -- 14 “More things in heaven and earth Horatio” Seeing and believing in Second Life, Carolyne Ali-Khan -- 15 EcoJustice and vulnerability in virtual worlds, Michael P. Mueller -- 16 Beyond the actual: Some of the challenges of conducting sociocultural research in virtual contexts, Catherine Milne.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 7
    ISBN: 9789401799508
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVII, 134 p. 14 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerBriefs in Education
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Educational psychology ; Education ; Education ; Educational psychology
    Abstract: This book reports an in-depth case study and the student teaching experience of four preservice teachers during practical and clinical experiences in classroom in an urban community in New York. It examines the associations between preservice teachers’ self-regulatory skills and motivational beliefs and their clinical experience both in the college training classroom and in the school settings. The experiences of the students are examined from the perspective of social cognitive theory and self-regulation theory. The authors present a concise summary of an in-depth case study with practical applications across a wide spectrum of fields. They also summarize and give an overview of theories, issues, core concepts related to the self-regulatory experience and motivation of the four case studies. In an effective blend of theory and case histories, Bembenutty, White, and Vélez provide valuable information and advice for prospective teachers and teacher educators. Their focus on help seeking is critical given the array of resources available to overcome early difficulties especially for teachers with significant challenges. Also important is helping them understand the role of delay of gratification in the face of expanding sources of distraction. Stuart A. Karabenick, Research Professor, University of Michigan This book builds a really strong case for the importance of self-regulation in teacher education. Moreover, it tells a fascinating story of educational success against the odds, made possible by personal stamina as well as contextual support. Both teacher students and teacher educators around the world will find this book a wonderful inspiration. Ivar Bråten, Professor, University of Oslo, Norway This is a practical book which provides a compelling narrative with page after page on teacher self-regulatory functioning. I recommend this book for teacher preparation programs, and I will definitely share it with many of my students and colleagues. Anastasia Kitsantas, Professor, George Mason University
    Description / Table of Contents: About the AuthorPreface -- Chapter 1. Introduction: The Case Study -- Chapter 2. SELF-regulated Learning and Development in Teacher Preparation Training -- Chapter 3. Objectives and Methods -- Chapter 4. School Observations & Classroom Experience -- Chapter 5. Survey: Motivation and Self-regulation -- Chapter 6. Student Teaching Interview -- Chapter 7. Putting it all together: What really matters? -- Appendixes.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9789401771917
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XI, 249 p, online resource)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2015
    Series Statement: Contemporary Philosophies and Theories in Education 8
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Arts ; Education ; Education ; Education Philosophy ; Arts
    Abstract: This volume examines the interface between the teachings of art and the art of teaching, and asserts the centrality of aesthetics for rethinking education. Many of the essays in this collection claim a direct connection between critical thinking, democratic dissensus, and anti-racist pedagogy with aesthetic experiences. They argue that aesthetics should be reconceptualized less as mere art appreciation or the cultivation of aesthetic judgment of taste, and more with the affective disruptions, phenomenological experiences, and the democratic politics of learning, thinking, and teaching. The first set of essays in the volume examines the unique pedagogies of the various arts including literature, poetry, film, and music. The second set addresses questions concerning the art of pedagogy and the relationship between aesthetic experience and teaching and learning. Demonstrating the flexibility and diversity of aesthetic expressions and experiences in education, the book deals with issues such as the connections between racism and affect, curatorship and teaching, aesthetic experience and the common, and studying and poetics. The book explores these topics through a variety of theoretical and philosophical lenses including contemporary post-structuralism, psychoanalysis, phenomenology, critical theory, and pragmatism.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction; Tyson E. Lewis and Megan J. LavertyPART I: ART’S TEACHINGS -- 1. Art’s Foreignness as an “Exit Pedagogy”; John Baldacchino -- 2. A Poietic Force that Belongs to No One: Reflections on Art and Education from an Agambenian Perspective; Joris Vlieghe -- 3. Opening Minds Through Narrative; Susan Verducci -- 4. An Organism of Words: Ekphrastic Poetry and the Pedagogy of Perception; Anne Keefe -- 5. Rosetta’s Moral Body: Modernist Lessons from Dardennes; René V. Arcilla -- 6. A Note on Scandals: The Role of Filmic Fantasy in Reproducing Teaching Ideals and Transgressions; James Stillwaggon and David Jelinek -- 7. Cinematic Screen Pedagogy in a Time of Modulated Control: To Think the Outside; Jan Jagodzinski -- 8. Music as an Apprenticeship for Life: John Dewey on the Art of Living; Megan J. Laverty -- 9. Aesthetics and Educational Value Struggles; Alexander J. Means -- 10. The Primacy of Movement in Research-Creation: New Materialist Approaches to Art Research and Pedagogy; Sarah Truman and Stephanie Springgay -- PART II: TEACHING’ ARTS -- 11. Suspending the Ontology of Effectiveness in Education: Reclaiming the Theatrical Gestures of the Ineffective Teacher; Tyson E. Lewis -- 12. Learning by Jamming; Eduardo Duarte -- 13. The Blue Soul of Jazz: Lessons on Waves of Anguish; Samuel Rocha -- 14. Funny Vibe: Towards a Somaesthetic Approach to Anti-Racist Education; David A. Granger -- 15. Toward a Curatorial Turn in Education; Claudia Ruitenberg.  .
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands
    ISBN: 9789401793520
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVII, 258 p. 16 illus., 5 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Multilingual Education 12
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Keywords: Applied linguistics ; Language and languages ; Education ; Education ; Applied linguistics ; Language and languages
    Abstract: This book examines language policies and practices in schools in regions of China populated by indigenous minority groups. It focuses on models of trilingual education, i.e. education in the home language, Putonghua (Mandarin Chinese, the national language), and English (the main foreign language). Special attention is given to the study of the vitality of the minority home language in each region and issues relating to and the effects of the teaching and learning of the minority home language on minority students’ acquisition of Mandarin Chinese and English and on their school performance in general. The book also examines the case of Cantonese in Guangdong, where the local Chinese ‘dialect’ is strong but distant from the mainstream language, Putonghua. It takes a new approach to researching sociolinguistic phenomena, and presents a new methodology that emerged from studies of bi/trilingualism in European societies and was then tailored to the trilingual context in China. The methodology encompasses policy analysis and community language profiles, as well as school-based fieldwork, and provides rich data that facilitate multilevel analysis of policy-in-context
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface1. Researching Trilingualism and Trilingual Education in China -- Part 1: Meng-Chao-Xin -- 2. Four Models of Mongolian Nationality Schools in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region -- 3.Trilingual Education in China’s Korean Communities -- 4. Language Learning and Empowerment: Languages in Education for Uyghurs in Xinjiang -- Part 2: Qing-Zang-Chuan -- 5. Ethnolinguistic Vitality, Language Attitudes and Language Education in Tibetan Schools in Qinghai -- 6. When English Meets Chinese in Tibetan Schools: Towards an Understanding of Multilingual Education in Tibet -- 7. A Multi-case Investigation into Trilingualism and Trilingual Education in Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture -- Part 3: Yun-Gui-Yue -- 8. A Survey Report on Trilingualism and Trilingual Education in Yunnan -- 9. Emerging Trilingualism among the Dong Minority in Guizhou Province -- 10. Language Attitudes of Secondary School Students in Guangdong -- 11. Trilingualism in Education: Models and Challenges.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
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  • 10
    ISBN: 9789401795029
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (IX, 189 p. 8 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 10
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Education ; Education ; Education, Higher
    Abstract: This book discusses and elaborates on how practice-based pedagogy can effectively co-exist with the practices and interests of academia. In doing so, it lays bare the tensions between learning in workplace practices and the cultures that contribute to the complex relationships required for successful implementation in higher education. It does so in an attempt to resolve an approach within which university students may enjoy the learning inherent in the practice of work whilst pursuing robust higher education qualifications. The contributions here variously explore the epistemologies, structures, politics, histories and rituals that both support and constrain opportunity and success in students’ experiences. They illuminate the issues, practices and factors that shape the processes and outcome of educational efforts to integrate experiences in both practice and educational settings, each of which has their own distinct cultures, practice within their communities
    Description / Table of Contents: Series Editors' Foreword; Contents; Contributors; Chapter-1; Practice-Based Learning in Higher Education: Jostling Cultures; Practice-Based Learning and Higher Education; The Provision of Practice-Based Experiences in Higher Education; Negotiating Amongst and Jostling Cultures; Transforming Institutional and Teacher Practices; Contributions to These Arguments; References; Chapter-2; The Practices of Using and Integrating Practice-Based Learning in Higher Education; Practice Based Experiences and Higher Education; The Learning of Occupations Within Practice Settings
    Description / Table of Contents: Constituting Effective Educational Provisions and PracticesTowards an Effective Integration of Practice Experiences; Providing Practice-Based Experiences; Pedagogic Practices for Integrating Practice Experiences Within Higher Education Courses; The Practices of Practice-Based Education; References; Chapter-3; Knowledge Claims and Values in Higher Education; Practice-Based Learning and Epistemological Difference; Knowledge Claims in the 'Practice Turn'; Traditions, Disciplines and Dissonance; Knowledge Claims and Confluence; Conclusions; References; Chapter-4
    Description / Table of Contents: Developing Critical Moral Agency Through Workplace EngagementPower, Agency and Learning in the Workplace; The Agency of the Emerging Professional; An Exploration of Moral Agency in Engineering and Science Students; Evolving Agentic Practice; Educating for Critical Moral Agency; Conclusion; References; Chapter-5; Standards and Standardization; Introduction; Critical discourse analysis; Standards and standardization ; The Benefits and Challenges of Standardization; A critique of the standards; Addressing the Questions; Embracing the opportunities ; Summary; Reference; Chapter-6
    Description / Table of Contents: Professional Standards in Curriculum Design: A Socio-Technical Analysis of Nursing Competency StandardsIntroduction; Literature Review; Professional Standards Can Work as a Boundary Object; Curriculum Design as Translation Work ; Legitimation of Nursing Knowledge Through Assemblages of Competence: A Theory-Methods Package; Discussion; Limitations; Conclusion; References; Chapter-7; The Role of Epistemology in Practice-Based Learning: The Case of Artifacts; The Artefact, the Discipline, the Academic and the Institution; Why Bourdieu and de Certeau? ; Field, Capital and Habitus; Field; Habitus
    Description / Table of Contents: (Habitus X Capital) + Field = PracticeDe Certeau and Practice; Negotiating Fields and Habitus in Pursuit of Excellent Practice; References; Chapter-8; E-learning as Organizing Practice in Higher Education; Introduction; Education as Organization and Practice; Practice, Technology and Organizing Education; E-learning Practice and Organizing in Higher Education ; The Brazilian E-Learning Models in Higher Education; Analysing E-learning Models in Higher Education as Organizing Practices by Brazilian Experience; Learning the E-learning "Times" ; The Necessity of Planning
    Description / Table of Contents: The Learning of VLE Logic and Functioning
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9789401793346
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XV, 386 p. 39 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Mathematics Study and teaching ; Education ; Education ; Mathematics
    Abstract: This study provides a historical analysis of Freudenthal’s didactic ideas and his didactic career. It is partly biographical, but also contributes to the historiography of mathematics education and addresses closely related questions such as: what is mathematics and where does it start? Which role does mathematics play in society and what influence does it have on the prevailing views concerning its accompanying didactics? Hans Freudenthal (1905-1990), professor in mathematics, scientist, literator, but above all mathematics-educator, was inextricably linked to the changes which took place in mathematics education and didactics during the second half of the last century. His diversity as a scientist and his inexhaustible efforts to establish the didactics of mathematics as a seriously pursued science, made Freudenthal's influence in this area considerable. He foresaw an essential, practical role for mathematics in everyone’s life, encouraging students to discover and create mathematics themselves, instead of imposing a ready-made mathematical system. The theory of mathematics education thus developed in the Netherlands would gain world fame in the following decades. Today, in the light of the discussions about mathematics education, in which the call for `genuine’ mathematics instead of the so-called 'kindergarten'-mathematics can be heard, Freudenthal's approach seems to be passé. However, the outcome of this study (which is mainly based on documents from Freudenthal’s vast personal archive) shows a more refined picture. The direct identification of 'kindergarten'-mathematics with Freudenthal’s view on mathematics education is not justified. 'Realistic mathematics' as advocated by Freudenthal includes more than just a practical introductory and should, among other things, always aim at teaching 'genuine' mathematics in the end
    Description / Table of Contents: Financing Statement; Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Abbreviations; Chapter-1; Introduction; A way to master this world; 1.1 Didactics of Mathematics and Hans Freudenthal: Definition of the Problem and Phrasing of the Question; 1.2 Don Quixote: The Freudenthal Myth?; 1.3 Research Method: The Use of Freudenthal's Personal Archive; 1.4 The Nature of the Study and the Historiography; 1.5 The Structure of This Book; References; Chapter-2; Mathematics Education in Secondary Schools and Didactics of Mathematics in the Period Between the Two World Wars
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.1 Secondary Education in the Period Between the Two World Wars2.1.1 The Origin of the School Types in Secondary Education; 2.1.2 Some School Types; 2.1.2.1 The HBS; 2.1.2.2 The Gymnasium; 2.1.2.3 The MMS; 2.1.2.4 The Lyceum; 2.1.3 The Competition between HBS and Gymnasium; 2.2 Discussions on the Mathematics Education at the VHMO; 2.2.1 The Initial Geometry Education and the Foundation of the Journal Euclides; 2.2.2 The Beth Committee and the Introduction of Differential and Integral Calculus; 2.2.3 The Controversy About Mechanics; 2.2.4 Educating the Mathematics Teacher
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.2.5 New Insights and the Wiskunde Werkgroep (Mathematics Working Group)References; Chapter-3; Hans Freudenthal-A Sketch; 3.1 Hans Freudenthal-An Impression; 3.2 Luckenwalde; 3.3 Berlin; 3.4 Amsterdam; 3.5 Utrecht; References; Chapter-4; Didactics of Arithmetic; 4.1 Dating of 'Rekendidaktiek'; 4.2 Cause and Intention; 4.3 Teaching of Arithmetic in Primary Schools; 4.4 Freudenthal's 'Rekendidaktiek': The Content; 4.4.1 Preface; 4.4.2 Auxiliary Sciences; 4.4.3 Aim and Use of Teaching of Arithmetic; 4.5 'Rekendidaktiek' ('Didactics of Arithmetic'): AllPositive Action Starts with Criticism
    Description / Table of Contents: ReferencesChapter-5; A New Start; 5.1 Educating; 5.1.1 Educating at Home; 5.1.2 'Our Task as Present-Day Educators'; 5.1.3 'Education for Thinking'; 5.1.4 'Educating' in De Groene Amsterdammer; 5.1.5 'The Cooperative Task of the Educator in Forming a Person'; 5.1.6 Education: A Summary; 5.2 Higher Education; 5.2.1 Studium Generale; 5.2.2 The Teachers Training; 5.2.3 Student Wage; 5.2.4 Higher Education: A Ramshackle Parthenon or a House in Order?; 5.3 The Wiskunde Werkgroep (Mathematics Working Group); 5.3.1 Activities of the Wiskunde Werkgroep
    Description / Table of Contents: 5.3.2 'The Algebraic and Analytical view on the Number Concept in Elementary Mathematics'5.3.3 'Mathematics for Non-Mathematical Studies'; 5.3.4 Freudenthal's Mathematical Working Group; References; Chapter-6; From Critical Outsider to True Authority; 6.1 Mathematics Education and the Education of the Intellectual Capacity; 6.2 A Body Under the Floorboards: The Mechanics Education; 6.3 Preparations for a New Curriculum; 6.4 Probability Theory and Statistics: A Text Book; 6.5 Paedagogums, Paeda Magicians and Scientists: The Teacher Training; 6.6 Freudenthal Internationally; References
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter-7
    Description / Table of Contents: AcknowledgementsChapter 1: Introduction - "A way to master this world’’ -- Chapter 2: Mathematics education in secondary schools and didactics of mathematics in the period between the two World Wars -- 2.1: Secondary Education in the period between the two world wars -- 2.1.1: The origination of the school types in secondary education -- 2.1.2: Some school types -- 2.1.3: The competition between HBS and Gymnasium -- 2.2: Discussions on the mathematics education at the VHMO -- 2.2.1: The initial geometry education and the foundation of journal Euclides -- 2.2.2: The Beth committee and the introduction of differential and integral calculus -- 2.2.3: The controversy about mechanics -- 2.2.4: Educating the mathematics teacher -- 2.2.5: New insights and the Wiskunde Werkgroep (Mathematics Working Group) -- Chapter 3: Hans Freudenthal - a sketch -- 3.1: Hans Freudenthal - an impression -- 3.2: Luckenwalde -- 3.3: Berlin -- 3.4: Amsterdam -- 3.5: Utrecht -- Chapter 4: Didactics of arithmetic -- 4.1: Dating of `Rekendidactiek’ -- 4.2: Cause and intention -- 4.3: Teaching of arithmetic in primary schools -- 4.4: Freudenthal’s `Rekendidactiek’: the content -- 4.4.1: Preface -- 4.4.2: Auxiliary sciences -- 4.4.3: Aim and use of teaching of arithmetic -- 4.5: `Rekendidactiek’ ‘Didactics of arithmetic’): every positive action starts with criticism -- Chapter 5: A new start -- 5.1: Educating -- 5.1.1: Educating at home -- 5.1.2: `Our task as present-day educators’ -- 5.1.3: `Education for thinking’.-5.1.4: `Educating’ in De Groene Amsterdammer -- 5.1.5: Education: a summary -- 5.2: Higher Education -- 5.2.1: Studium Generale -- 5.2.2: The teachers training -- 5.2.3: Student wage -- 5.2.4: Higher education: a ramshackle parthenon or a house in order? -- 5.3: The Wiskunde Werkgroep (the Mathematics Study Group) -- 5.3.1: Activities of the Wiskunde Werkgroep -- 5.3.2: `The algebraic and analytical view on the number concept in elementary mathematics’ -- 5.3.3: `Mathematics for non-mathematical studies’ -- 5.3.4: Freudenthal’s mathematical working group -- Chapter 6: From critical outsider to true authority -- 6.1: Mathematics education and the education of the intellectual capacity -- 6.2: A body under the floor boards: the mechanics education -- 6.3: Preparations for a new curriculum -- 6.4: Probability theory and statistics: a text book.-6.5: Paedagogums, paeda magicians and scientists: the teacher training -- 6.6: Freudenthal internationally -- Chapter 7: Freudenthal and the Van Hieles’ level theory. A learning process.-7.1: Introduction: a special PhD project -- 7.2: Freudenthal as supervisor -- 7.3: `Problems of insight’: Van Hiele’s level theory -- 7.4: Freudenthal and the theory of the Van Hieles: from `level theory’ to `guided re-invention’ -- 7.5: Analysis of a learning process: reflection on reflection -- 7.6: To conclude -- Chapter 8: Method versus content. New Math and the modernization of mathematics education -- 8.1: Introduction: time for modernization -- 8.2: New Math -- 8.2.1: The gap between modern mathematics and mathematics education -- 8.2.2: Modernization of the mathematics education in the Unites States -- 8.3: Royaumont: a bridge club with unforeseen consequences -- 8.3.1: Freudenthal in `the group of experts’ -- 8.3.2: Royaumont without Freudenthal: the launch of New Math -- 8.4: Freudenthal on modern mathematics and its meaning for mathematics education -- 8.4.1: The nature of modern mathematics -- 8.4.2: Modern mathematics for the public at large -- 8.4.3: The mathematician "in der Unterhose auf der Strasse" ("in his underpants on the street") -- 8.4.4: Fairy tales and dead ends -- 8.4.5: Modern mathematics as the solution? -- 8.5: Modernization of mathematics education in the Netherlands -- 8.5.1: Initiatives inside and outside of the Netherlands -- 8.5.2: Freudenthal: from WW to ‘cooperate with a view to adjust’ -- 8.5.3: The Commissie Modernisering Leerplan Wiskunde -- 8.5.4: A professional development programme for teachers -- 8.5.5: A new curriculum -- 8.6: Geometry education -- 8.6.1: Freudenthal and geometry education -- 8.6.2: Freudenthal on the initial geometry education: try it and see -- 8.6.3: Axiomatizing instead of axiomatics - but not in geometry -- 8.6.4: Modern geometry in the education according to Freudenthal -- 8.7: Logic -- 8.7.1: ``Exact logic’’ -- 8.7.2: The application of modern logic in education -- 8.8: Freudenthal and New Math: conclusion -- 8.8.1: A lonely opponent of New Math? -- 8.8.2: Cooperate in order to adjust -- 8.8.3: Knowledge as a weapon in the struggle for a better mathematics education -- 8.8.4: Freudenthal about the aim of mathematics education -- Chapter 9: Here’s how Freudenthal saw it -- 9.1: Introduction: changes in the scene of action -- 9.2: Educational Studies in Mathematics -- 9.2.1: Not exactly bursting with enthusiasm: the launch -- 9.2.2: Freudenthal as guardian of the level -- 9.3: The Institute for the Development of Mathematics Education -- 9.3.1: From CMLW to IOWO -- 9.3.2: Freudenthal and the IOWO -- 9.4: Exploring the world from the paving bricks to the moon -- 9.4.1: Observations as a father in `Rekendidactiek’ -- 9.4.2: Observing as a grandfather: walking with the grand-children -- 9.4.3: Granddad Hans: a critical comment -- 9.4.4: Walking on the railway track: the mathematics of a three-year old -- 9.4.5: Observing and the IOWO -- 9.5: Observations as a source -- 9.5.1: Professor or senile grandfather? -- 9.5.2: The paradigm: the ultimate example -- 9.5.3: Here is how Freudenthal saw it: concept of number and didactical phenomenology -- 9.5.4: The right to sound mathematics for all -- 9.6: Enfant terrible -- 9.6.1: Weeding -- 9.6.2: Drumming on empty barrels -- 9.6.3: Freudenthal on Piaget: admiration and merciless criticism -- 9.7: The task for the future -- Chapter 10: Epilogue - We have come full circle.
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  • 12
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands
    ISBN: 9789401794930
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXXIV, 854 p. 28 illus) , online resource
    Edition: Springer eBook Collection. Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
    DDC: 379
    Keywords: Education ; Curriculum planning ; Education, Higher
    Abstract: This handbook presents a global overview of developments in education and policy change during the last decade. It provides an accessible, practical and comparative source of current research that examines the intersecting and diverse discourses of this important issue. Divided into two parts, the handbook first examines globalisation and education policy reforms, including coverage of main trends as well as specific policy issues such as gender, equity, minorities and human rights. Next, the handbook offers a comparative perspective that evaluates the ambivalent and problematic relationship between globalisation, the state and education reforms globally. It features coverage on curricula issues and education reforms in schools around the world as well as the curriculum in the global culture. Now more than ever there is a need to understand and analyse both the intended and the unintended effects of globalisation on economic competitiveness, educational systems, the state and relevant policy changes - all as they affect individuals, the higher education sector, schools, policy-makers and powerful corporate organisations across the globe. By examining some of the major education policy issues, particularly in the light of recent shifts in education and policy research, this handbook offers readers a comprehensive picture of the impact of globalisation on education policy and reforms. It will serve as a vital sourcebook of ideas for researchers, practitioners and policy makers in education
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword; Preface; References; Acknowledgements; Contents; Contributors; Overview and Introduction; 1 Global Trends in Education and Academic Achievement; 1.1 Comparative View of Academic Achievement; 1.2 Schools for the Future; 1.3 Educational Policy Goals and Outcomes; 2 International Studies of Educational Achievement; 3 Globalisation, Education and Policy; 4 Multidimensional Aspect of Globalisation; 5 The Aim, Purpose and Structure of This Handbook; 6 Globalisation, Education and Policy Reforms; 6.1 Globalisation and Higher Education; 7 Globalisation and Education Policy Reform
    Description / Table of Contents: 7.1 Globalisation, Education Policy and Change7.2 Policy Issues: Gender, Equity, Minorities, and Human Rights; 8 Globalisation, Education and Policy Research: Changing Schools: Section 3: Globalisation and Education Policy: Comparative Perspective; 8.1 Education, Policy and Curricula Issues; 8.2 Globalisation, Education Policy and Reform: Changing Schools; References; Part I: Globalisation, Education and Policy Research; Globalisation and Neoliberalism: A New Theory for New Times?; 1 The Concept of Globalisation; 2 Globalisation Theory as the 'Spatiotemporal Reformulation of Social Theory'
    Description / Table of Contents: 3 Globalisation and Communications Technology4 Critical Reflections; 5 Conclusion: Globalisation Theory and the  Neoliberal Moment; References; Globalisation, Hegemony and Education Policies; 1 Globalisation, Ideology and Policy; 1.1 Ideology; 2 Paradigms, Culture and Ideology; 3 Early and Late Modern Ideologies; 3.1 Liberalism, Social Liberalism and Neoliberalism; 3.2 Conservatism; 3.3 Communism, Utopian Socialism, Syndicalism, Anarchism, Cooperative Socialism; 3.4 Populism; 4 Globalisation, Hegemony and Education; 5 Educational Paradigms and Ideologies; 5.1 The Market-Oriented Paradigm
    Description / Table of Contents: 5.2 The Etatist-Welfarist-Oriented Paradigm5.3 The Communitarian Paradigm; 6 Meta-ideological Dimensions; 7 Conclusion; References; Globalisation and Social Change; 1 Globalisation, Education and the Wellbeing of Humans; 2 Globalisation: Monitoring Human Development; 2.1 Index of Human Development; 3 Calculating the Human Development Index; 4 The Gender Inequality Index (GII); 5 Monitoring Educational Outcomes; 6 The First and Second IEA Science Studies; 7 The First and Second IEA Studies of Reading; 8 Globalisation and Monitoring Within Countries
    Description / Table of Contents: 9 Monitoring of Achievement in the National Assessment of Educational Progress in the United States10 Globalisation and the Monitoring of Educational Outcomes; 11 The Agencies Currently Involved in Monitoring and Evaluation Programs; 11.1 The International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA); 11.2 The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA); 11.3 Southern and Eastern African Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality (SACMEQ); 11.4 Latin American Laboratory for the Evaluation of Quality in Education (LLECE)
    Description / Table of Contents: 11.5 The Conference of Education Ministers of Countries Using French as the Language of Communication (CONFERMEN)
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9789401793193
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (X, 256 p. 6 illus., 3 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Landscapes: the Arts, Aesthetics, and Education 15
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Philosophy of music education challenged
    RVK:
    Keywords: Education ; Education ; Education Philosophy ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Heidegger, Martin 1889-1976 ; Musik ; Pädagogik ; Bildung ; Heidegger, Martin 1889-1976 ; Musik ; Pädagogik ; Bildung
    Abstract: This volume offers key insights into the crisis of legitimization that music as a subject of arts education seems to be in. Music as an educational subject is under intense pressure, both economically, due to the reduction of education budgets, as well as due to a loss of status with policy makers. The contributions in this book illuminate Martin Heidegger’s thinking as a highly cogent theoretical framework for understanding the nature and depth of this crisis. The contributors explore from various angles the relationship between the pressure on music education and the foundations of our technical and rationalized modern society, and lead the way on the indispensable first steps towards reconnecting the cultural practices of education with music and its valuable contributions to personal development
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: An Ontological Turn in the Field of Music and Music EducationPart I Technical Rationality and Nihilism -- 1. Musings of Heidegger: Arts Education and the Mall as a ‘debased’ (Dreyfus) work of Art -- 2. The Intrinsic Value of Musical Experience. A Rethinking: Why and How? -- 3. Ways of Revealing: Music Education Responses to Music Technology -- 4. Towards an Ontological Turn in Music Education with Heidegger’s Philosophy of being and his Notion of Releasement -- Part II Music and Being -- 5. Body - Music - Being: Making Music as Bodily Being in the World -- 6. Music as Art - Art as Being - Being as Music: A Philosophical Investigation into how Music Education can Embrace a Work of Art Based on Heidegger’s Thinking -- Part III Musical Experience -- 7. Music, Truth and Belonging: Listening with Heidegger -- 8. The Phenomenology of Music: Implications for Teenage Identities and Music Education -- 9. Music Education as a Dialogue between the Outer and the Inner: A Jazz Pedagogue’s Philosophy of Music Education -- 10. Pendulum Dialogues and the Re-enchantment of the World -- Part IV Bildung and Truth -- 11. Revisiting the Cave: Heidegger’s Reinterpretation of Plato’s Allegory with Reference to Music Education -- 12. From Heidegger to Dufrenne and Back: Bildung Beyond Subject and Object in Art Experience -- 13. Practice as Self-exploration -- 14. Art and ‘Truth’: Heidegger’s Ontology in Light of Ernst Bloch’s Philosophy of Hope and Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Play-metaphor. Three Impulses for a New Perspective of Musical Bildung.
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  • 14
    ISBN: 9789401793551
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXV, 467 p. 16 illus., 1 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Indigenous education
    RVK:
    Keywords: International education ; Comparative education ; Educational policy ; ducation and state ; Educational sociology ; Higher education ; Anthropology ; Education and sociology ; Sociology, Educational ; Education ; Education ; Education, Higher ; Anthropology ; Indigenes Volk ; Bildung ; Pädagogische Anthropologie ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Indigenes Volk ; Bildung ; Pädagogische Anthropologie ; Kulturelle Identität
    Abstract: Indigenous Education is a compilation of conceptual chapters and national case studies that includes empirical research based on a series of data collection methods. The book provides up-to-date scholarly research on global trends on three issues of paramount importance with indigenous education-language, culture, and identity. It also offers a strategic comparative and international education policy statement on recent shifts in indigenous education, and new approaches to explore, develop, and improve comparative education and policy research globally. Contributing authors examine several social justice issues related to indigenous education. In addition to case perspectives from 12 countries and global regions, the volume includes five conceptual chapters on topics that influence indigenous education, including policy debates, the media, the united nations, formal and informal education systems, and higher education
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Brief Author Bios; List of Acronyms and Abbreviations; List of Figures; List of Tables; 1 Global Review of Indigenous Education: Issues of Identity, Culture, and Language; Introduction; Global Roots of Education for All; Global Review of Literature on Indigenous Education; Regional Perspective from Africa; Regional Perspective from Asia; Regional Perspective from Europe; Regional Perspective from Latin America; Regional Perspective from Canada and the United States; Regional Perspective from Oceania; Chapter Summaries of the Book; Section I: Thematic Issues on Indigenous Education
    Description / Table of Contents: Section II: LanguageSection III: Culture; Section IV: Identity; Conclusion; References; Part I Thematic Issues on Indigenous Education; 2 Policy Debates and Indigenous Education: The Trialectic of Language, Culture, and Identity; Introduction; Indigenous Education in Five Countries; China; Mexico; Taiwan; Uganda; United States; Conclusion; References; 3 ICT and Indigenous Education: Emerging Challenges and Potential Solutions; Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and Educational Resources: New Opportunities But Old Challenges; ICT, Language and Cultural Barriers
    Description / Table of Contents: Cultural PreservationUse of ICT to Target Underserved and Indigenous Populations; Conclusion; References; 4 Formal and Informal Indigenous Education; Introduction; Informal Learning, the Learning Continuum and Indigenous Communities; Relations of Power and Educational Distinctions; Knowledge Boundaries and Their Implications for Indigenous Communities; Dynamics of Knowledge Systems and Knowledge Relations; Formal and Informal Learning-Seeking a Balance; References; 5 Indigenous Higher Education; The Assimilationist Anti-indigenous Education Model; Indigenous Higher Education
    Description / Table of Contents: An Indigenous ParadigmReferences; 6 East or West? Tradition and the Development of Hybrid Higher Education in Asia: Focus on China; The Traditional Context and Western Contact; The Intellectual Tradition in China; Some Observations on Indigenous Chinese Higher Education; Structure; Curriculum; Teachers, Students, Learning, and Assessment; Discussion; References; Part II Language; 7 Strategies for Overcoming Linguistic Genocide: How to Avoid Macroaggressions and Microaggressions that Lead Toward Indigenous Language Annihilation; Four Strategies to Avoid Linguistic Genocide
    Description / Table of Contents: Parents Are Central to Indigenous Language PreservationIndigenous Peoples Must Be Involved; Governments Should Play a Leading Role; Leverage Advances in Technology; Conclusion; References; 8 Sustaining Indigenous Identity Through Language Development: Comparing Indigenous Language Instruction in Two Contexts; Introduction; Indigenous Language Revitalization and Decentralization of Schooling; Northern Cheyenne: A Case Study of Language Revitalization; Impact on Education; Language Endangerment and Schooling; Northern Cheyenne Schooling and Language Revitalization
    Description / Table of Contents: Northern Cheyenne Language Revitalization
    Description / Table of Contents: ForewordPreface -- 1. Global Review of Indigenous Education: Issues of Identity, Culture, and Language. W. James Jacob, Sheng Yao Cheng, and Maureen K. Porter -- Section I: Thematic Issues on Indigenous Education -- 2. Policy Debates and Indigenous Education: The Trialectic of Language, Culture, and Identity. W. James Jacob, Jing Liu, and Che-Wei Lee -- 3. ICT and Indigenous Education: Emerging Challenges and Potential Solutions. Rebecca A. Clothey -- 4. Formal and Informal Indigenous Education. Terry Wotherspoon -- 5. Indigenous Higher Education. Duane W. Champagne -- 6. Indigenous Chinese Higher Education: John N. Hawkins -- Section II: Language -- 7. Strategies for Overcoming Linguistic Genocide: How to Avoid Macroaggressions and Microaggressions that Lead toward Indigenous Language Annihilation. W. James Jacob -- 8. Sustaining Indigenous Identity through Language Development: Comparing Indigenous Language Instruction in Two Contexts: Carol J. Ward and David B. Braudt -- 9. Language-in-Education Policies in Africa: Perspectives, Practices, and Implications: Connie Ssebbunga-Masembe, Christopher B. Mugimu, Anthony Mugagga, and Stephen Backman -- 10. The Sami People in Scandinavia: Government Policies for Indigenous Language Recognition and Support in the Formal Education System: Mina O’Dowd -- 11. Learning from the Moa: The Challenge of Maori Language Revitalization in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Roger Boshier -- 12. Heteroglossia: Reframing the Conversation around Literacy Achievement for English Language Learners and American Indian/Alaska Native Students: Evelisa Natasha Genova and Lydia Ross -- Section III: Culture -- 13. Somos Incas: Enduring Cultural Sensibilities and Indigenous Education. Maureen K. Porter -- 14. Indigenous History, Culture, and Education in the Pacific Islands. Richard Scaglion -- 15. Reclaiming Indigenous Cultures in African Education. Edward Shizha -- 16. Indigenous Knowledges in Education: Anticolonial Struggles in a Monocultural Arena with Reference to Chile and South America. Anders Breidlid and Louis Royce Botha -- 17. The Role of Schools in Native American Language and Culture Revitalization: A Vision of Linguistic and Educational Sovereignty. Teresa L. McCarty and Tiffany S. Lee -- 18. Between the Community and the Individual: Identity in Intercultural Education in Mexico. Rocío Fuentes -- Section IV: Identity -- 19. Beyond the Cultural Turn: Indigenous Identity and Mainstream Identity. Sheng Yao Cheng -- 20. Idigeneity and Global Citizenship. Jerome M. Levi and Elizabeth Durham -- 21. Indigenous Identity and Education in Peruvian Amazonia. Bartholomew Dean -- 22. Intersections of Identity and Education: The Native American Experience. Hilary N. Weaver -- Index.
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