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  • MPI Ethno. Forsch.  (6)
  • 2010-2014  (6)
  • 1980-1984
  • 1965-1969
  • Rotterdam : SensePublishers  (6)
  • Multicultural education
Datasource
  • MPI Ethno. Forsch.  (6)
  • BSZ  (6)
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Year
  • 1
    ISBN: 9789462098541
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XVI, 122 p)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2014
    Series Statement: Transgressions, Cultural Studies and Education  104
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Series Statement: Springer eBooks
    Series Statement: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Origins: A Sustainable Concept in Education
    Keywords: Education, general ; Multicultural education ; Identity (Psychology) ; Education
    Abstract: Although we live in an era of multiple identities and belongings, origins still seem to matter. For most people origins are obvious and transparent. We all come from somewhere. Yet talking about one’s origins can be highly sensitive and problematic depending on our roles, emotions, interlocutors and contexts. This volume problematizes the relativity, instability and politics of the concept in the field of education. The authors examine how origins are played upon in many and varied educational contexts and propose alternative ways of dealing with – see reinventing – origins. This volume is original in several senses. It is one of the first books to deal directly and honestly with the thorny concept of origins in education. Balancing arguments for and against the advantages and drawbacks of origins, the volume will appeal to confirmed and novice researchers, practitioners and decision-makers who struggle with these elements. The volume is not a ‘recipe book’ to be followed as such. It offers fresh and sincere perspectives to current discussions on multiculturalism, intersectionality and social justice in education around the world by tackling a somewhat taboo subject
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789462092662
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (X, 202 p, online resource)
    Series Statement: The Future of Education Research
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Multilingualism and Multimodality: Current Challenges for Educational Studies
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Multilingualism and multimodality
    RVK:
    Keywords: Multicultural education ; Multilingual education ; Education ; Education ; Konferenzschrift ; Bildung ; Multimodalität
    Abstract: Preliminary Material /Ingrid de Saint-Georges and Jean-Jacques Weber -- Multilingualism, Multimodality and the Future of Education Research /Ingrid de Saint-Georges -- Superdiverse Repertoires and the Individual /Jan Blommaert and Ad Backus -- From Multilingual Practices to Social Processes /Luisa Martín Rojo -- Language, Superdiversity and Education /Adrian Blackledge , Angela Creese and Jaspreet Kaur Takhi -- Multilingualism in EU Institutions /Ruth Wodak -- Multilingual Universities and the Monolingual Mindset /Jean-Jacques Weber and Kristine Horner -- Recognizing Learning /Gunther Kress -- Multimodality and Digital Technologies in the Classroom /Carey Jewitt -- Power, Miscommunication and Cultural Diversity /Laurent Filliettaz , Stefano Losa and Barbara Duc -- Geographies of Discourse /Ron Scollon -- Index /Ingrid de Saint-Georges and Jean-Jacques Weber.
    Abstract: In the social sciences and humanities, researchers often qualify the period in which we are living as ‘late-modern’, ‘post-modern’ or ‘superdiverse’. These terms seek to capture changing conditions and priorities brought about by a new social order. This social order is characterized, among other traits, by an increased visibility of social, cultural and linguistic diversity, arising out of unprecedented migration and mobility patterns. It is also associated with the development of information and communication technologies, which in the digital era transform communication patterns, identities, relationships and possibilities for action. For education, these late-modern conditions create numerous interesting challenges, given that they are of course reflected in the classroom and other sites of learning. Conditions of ‘superdiversity’ mean that, in educational institutions, varied practices, linguistic repertoires, and symbolic resources come into contact, posing questions about how institutions and actors choose to deal with this diversity. Likewise, digital technologies with their possibilities for assembling and using multimodal texts in new ways transform the learning experience, redefining what counts as teaching, learning, knowledge, or assessment. By providing careful analyses of policies and interactions in superdiverse, technologically complex, educational contexts, the authors of this volume contribute something important: they give a shape—a semiotic form—to some of the issues raised by transnational migration, sociocultural diversity, and digital complexity. They construct a framework for reflecting about the new social order and its impact on education. They also reveal the kinds of new questions and new terrains that can and must be explored by linguistic research if it wants to stay relevant for education in these times of change
    Description / Table of Contents: Multilingualism and Multimodality: Current Challenges for Educational Studies; TABLE OF CONTENTS; THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION RESEARCH: Introduction to the series of three volumes; PREFACE; MULTILINGUALISM, MULTIMODALITY AND THEFUTURE OF EDUCATION RESEARCH; EDUCATION IN TIMES OF CHANGE; MULTILINGUALISM AND MULTIMODALITY: DIVERSE READINGS; Overview of the Chapters; Key Themes; THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION RESEARCH; NOTE; REFERENCES; I. MULTILINGUALISM:CONCEPTS, PRACTICES AND POLICIES; SUPERDIVERSE REPERTOIRES ANDTHE INDIVIDUAL; INTRODUCTION; SUPERDIVERSITY; LANGUAGE LEARNING TRAJECTORIES
    Description / Table of Contents: The Biographic Dimension of RepertoiresLearning by Degree; KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGE(S); Thirty-Eight Languages; Competence Detailed; Repertoires as Indexical Biographies; LATE-MODERN REPERTOIRES AND SUBJECTS; NOTES; REFERENCES; FROM MULTILINGUAL PRACTICES TO SOCIALPROCESSES: The Understanding of Linguistic 'Respect' in Contact Zones; A SOCIOLINGUISTIC ETHNOGRAPHY IN A MADRID SECONDARY SCHOOL; RESEARCH QUESTIONS; Excerpt 1; Excerpt 2; NEGOTIATION: THE MONOLINGUAL NORM AND MUTUAL 'RESPECT'; Excerpt 3; CONCLUSIONS; NOTES; REFERENCES; LANGUAGE, SUPERDIVERSITY AND EDUCATION; SUPERDIVERSITY
    Description / Table of Contents: MULTILINGUALISMHETEROGLOSSIA; METHODS; HETEROGLOSSIA IN THE LANGUAGE CLASSROOM; DISCUSSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; MULTILINGUALISM IN EU INSTITUTIONS: Between Policy Making and Implementation; INTEGRATING CRITICAL SOCIOLINGUISTICS AND CRITICALDISCOURSE STUDIES; Defining Critique and Critical; Multilingualism and the EU's Lisbon Strategy; ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK: CSL AND DHA; Theoretical Background and Key Concepts; Research Methodology and Research Foci; LANGUAGE IDEOLOGIES AND EVERYDAY PRACTICES; Ethnography of the EU Institutions; 'Performing Multilingualism'
    Description / Table of Contents: Ideas/Ideologies about MultilingualismSOME FUTURE PERSPECTIVES; NOTES; REFERENCES; MULTILINGUAL UNIVERSITIES ANDTHE MONOLINGUAL MINDSET; INTRODUCTION; MONOLINGUAL VERSUS MULTILINGUAL MINDSET; What is a Language?; What is Multilingualism?; THE MONOLINGUAL MINDSET AND NATIONAL NARRATIVES OF SURVIVAL; CASE STUDY OF TWO MULTILINGUAL UNIVERSITIES; How the Universities of Helsinki and Luxembourg Fit intothe Discourses of Survival; How Both Universities are Caught Up in Language Ideological Debates; CONCLUSION: THE MONOLINGUAL HABITUS OF MULTILINGUAL UNIVERSITIES; NOTES; REFERENCES
    Description / Table of Contents: II. MULTIMODALITY:CONCEPTS, PRACTICES AND CONSEQUENCESRECOGNIZING LEARNING: A Perspective from a Social Semiotic Theory of Multimodality; EDUCATION IN A PERIOD OF SOCIAL TRANSITION: FROM 'STATE'TO THE NEO-LIBERAL MARKET; 'SIGNS OF LEARNING': AGENCY, PRINCIPLES, RESOURCES; RECOGNITION: AGENCY AND MULTIMODALITY; RECOGNITION THROUGH A SOCIAL SEMIOTIC THEORY OF MULTIMODALITY; EMBODIED KNOWING: THE NOTIONS OF IMPLICITNESS AND EXPLICITNESS; EDUCATION AS A FULLY MARKETIZED COMMODITY; NOTE; REFERENCES; MULTIMODALITY AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES INTHE CLASSROOM; INTRODUCTION; A MULTIMODAL PERSPECTIVE
    Description / Table of Contents: TECHNOLOGY IN THE ENGLISH CLASSROOM
    Note: "The contributions presented in this volume derive from the second lecture series - in a set four - dedicated to the interdisciplinary investigation of the 'Future of Education Research'. This second series took place between September 2011 and January 2012 at the Faculty of Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education (FLSHASE), University of Luxembourg." - Seite ix , Literaturangaben
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Rotterdam : SensePublishers
    ISBN: 9789462090835
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XX, 136 p, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Complex Classroom Encounters: A South African Perspective
    Keywords: Effective teaching ; Multicultural education ; Education ; Education
    Abstract: Preliminary Material -- Linguistic Diversity in the Classroom: Historical Roots of the Challenge and Opportunity -- Intersecting Worldviews -- Language Policies: What are the Roots and Current Directions? -- Language, Pedagogy and Politics Intersect in the Classroom -- Inside Classrooms: Visual Messages -- Global Change: Challenge or Opportunity for South Africa’s Teachers? -- References -- Index.
    Abstract: This scholarly work appears at a crucial moment in South Africa. With the country now democratically independent for close to 20 years, the authors provide a comprehensive description of schooling and overall education, that allows the reader to see if or how the wide social development gaps that existed during the apartheid period are changing. This book is a rare academic contribution to the current linguistic and culturally rich classroom that teachers now work in daily. The authors report that some teachers are flummoxed by what they find, newly trained teachers seem better prepared, while others bring old but good teaching habits into the classroom. Overall, this book, rooted as it is in meticulous, long-term ethnographic classroom observations and multiple teacher interviews, shows that what is effective for the learning of learners is not by any means detachable from demographic, economic or political contexts. With that in mind, the book`s intentions and structure are clear, and the initial historical analyses provide insight to the important linguistic, social and cultural connections or disconnections present in contemporary South Africa
    Description / Table of Contents: Complex Classroom Encounters; CONTENTS; ILLUSTRATIONS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; ABBREVIATIONS; PREFACE; NOTES; CHAPTER ONE: LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY IN THE CLASSROOM:HISTORICAL ROOTS OF THE CHALLENGE ANDOPPORTUNITY; THE HISTORY OF SOUTH AFRICA'S CURRENT LANGUAGE LANDSCAPE; Migratory Patterns - Major Languages; THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS; Crossing the Threshold: Home and School Meet; Plural Conceptions of Literacy; Language for Learning; CONCLUSION; NOTES; CHAPTER TWO: INTERSECTING WORLDVIEWS; SOCIALISATION FOR ADULT PARTICIPATION IN SOCIETY; What Is Socialisation?
    Description / Table of Contents: TRADITIONAL RURAL, AND 'MODERN' URBAN LIFESTYLES: ACHARACTERISATION OF DISTINCT WORLDVIEWSTHE PRE-COLONIAL, RURAL, TRADITIONAL, AND ORAL-LITERATE WORLD; THE POST-COLONIAL, URBAN, INDUSTRIALISED, 'LITERATE' WORLD; Defining 'Western' Education Philosophy; WHAT THINKING LINKS THE PRE-COLONIAL AND POST-COLONIAL WORLDS?; What Does the Foregoing Have to Do with Urban Foundation Phase Classrooms?; TEACHERS' VOICES FROM THE CLASSROOM; Focus on Control; Cultural Tensions in the Classroom; Teacher-Centred, Transmission Mode of Teaching; CONCLUSION; NOTES
    Description / Table of Contents: CHAPTER THREE: LANGUAGE POLICIES: WHAT ARE THE ROOTS ANDCURRENT DIRECTIONS?WHAT IS A POLICY?; Economic Factors; Political Factors; Cultural Factors; POLICIES HAVE HISTORICAL ROOTS; CURRENT DIRECTIONS OF SOUTH AFRICAN LANGUAGE POLICIES; CHILDREN'S LANGUAGE AND EDUCATION RIGHTS; CONCOMITANT LINGUISTIC DEMANDS MADE ON TEACHERS; HOW DOES THE FOREGOING MANIFEST IN THE URBANFOUNDATION PHASE CLASSROOM?; CONCLUSION; NOTES; CHAPTER FOUR: LANGUAGE, PEDAGOGY AND POLITICS INTERSECTIN THE CLASSROOM; THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS; METHOD - RESEARCH PROCESS; CONTEXTUALISING THE RESEARCH SITES; Pretoria
    Description / Table of Contents: MontrealLANGUAGE, PEDAGOGY AND POLITICS MEET IN THE CLASSROOM; DEFINING COMPLEX LANGUAGE ENCOUNTERS; Pretoria; Class: Go up the lift [elevator] and go down the lift!; Montreal; CONCLUSION; NOTES; CHAPTER FIVE: INSIDE CLASSROOMS: VISUAL MESSAGES; VISUAL ETHNOGRAPHY; SPACE THEORY; VISUAL EVIDENCE OF BORDER CROSSING; WHAT DOES SPACE HAVE TO DO WITH LANGUAGE USE IN THE CLASSROOM?; PRINTED LEARNING MATERIALS: FERTILE GROUND FOR COMPLEXLANGUAGE ENCOUNTERS; CONCLUSION; NOTES; CHAPTER SIX: GLOBAL CHANGE: CHALLENGE OR OPPORTUNITYFOR SOUTH AFRICA'S TEACHERS?; WHAT IS GLOBALISATION?
    Description / Table of Contents: HOW DOES GLOBALISATION AFFECT SCHOOLING IN SOUTH AFRICA?Hegemony of English; Curriculum; Technology; Text Materials; SOME CONCLUDING THOUGHTS; NOTES; REFERENCES; INDEX
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 4
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    Online Resource
    Rotterdam : SensePublishers
    ISBN: 9789460914157 , 1280785152 , 9781280785153
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XV, 135p, digital)
    Series Statement: Transgressions: Cultural Studies and Education 66
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T.
    Keywords: Education ; Educational change ; Maori (New Zealand people) Education (Secondary) ; Multicultural education ; Educational equalization ; Education and state. ; Education
    Abstract: Preliminary Material -- Freeing Ourselves from Neo-colonial Dominance in Research -- Freeing Ourselves from Neo-colonial Domination in Public School Classrooms -- Freeing Schools and Education Systems from Neo-colonial Dominance -- References -- Index.
    Abstract: This book draws together many previously published articles and book chapters produced by the author over the past 20 years of work in the field of indigenous education. However, rather than just being a compilation of a series of papers, this book is a record of the development of an indigenous approach towards large-scale, theory-based education reform that is now being implemented, in two different forms, in almost half of the secondary schools in New Zealand. Fundamental to this theorising is the understanding, identified by Paulo Freire over forty years ago, that answers to the conditions oppressed peoples find themselves in is not to be found in the language or understandings of the oppressors. Rather, it is to be found in those of the oppressed. This realisation has been confirmed by the examples in this book. The first is seen where it is identified how researching in Maori contexts needs to be conducted dialogically within the world view and understandings of Maori people. Secondly, dialogue in its widest sense is crucial for developing a means whereby Maori students are able to participate successfully in education. The book details how researching the impact of colonization on his mother’s Maori family enabled the author to develop a means of researching within indigenous, Maori contexts. It then details how the lessons learnt here appealed as being a means by which the marginalization of Maori students in mainstream, public school classrooms could be re-theorised, and how schools and education systems could be reorganised so as to support indigenous students to be successful learners
    Description / Table of Contents: Freeing Ourselves; DEDICATION; TABLE OF CONTENTS; INTRODUCTION: FREEING OURSELVES: An Indigenous Response to Neo-Colonial Dominance in Research, Classrooms, Schools and Education Systems; The Current Context; Kaupapa Maori Responses; NOTES; CHAPTER 1: FREEING OURSELVES FROM NEO-COLONIAL DOMINATION IN RESEARCH: A Kaupapa Maori Approach to Creating Knowledge1; MAORI PEOPLE'S CONCERNS ABOUT RESEARCH: ISSUES OF POWER; Insiders/Outsiders: Who can Conduct Research in Indigenous Settings?; KAUPAPA MAORI RESEARCH; Examples of Culturally Responsive Research Practices
    Description / Table of Contents: ADDRESSING ISSUES OF SELF-DETERMINATIONWhakawhanaungatanga as a Kaupapa Maori Research Approach; Determining Benefits: Identifying Lines of Accountability using Maori Metaphor; Spiral Discourse; INITIATING RESEARCH USING MAORI METAPHOR: REJECTING EMPOWERMENT; ADDRESSING ISSUES OF REPRESENTATION AND LEGITIMATION: A NARRATIVE APPROACH; APPROACHES TO AUTHORITY AND VALIDITY; Subjectivities/Objectivities; EPILOGUE; NOTES; CHAPTER 2: FREEING OURSELVES FROM NEO-COLONIAL DOMINATION IN PUBLIC SCHOOL CLASSROOMS1; PART A: KAUPAPA MAORI AS SCHOOLING; Rangatiratanga: Relative Autonomy/Self-determination
    Description / Table of Contents: Taonga Tuku Iho (Cultural Aspirations)Ako (Reciprocal Learning); Kia piki ake i nga raruraru o te kainga (Mediation of Socio-economic and Home Difficulties); Whanau: (Extended Family); Kaupapa (Collective Vision, Philosophy); Implications of these Metaphors; PART B: A CULTURLLY RESPONSIVE PEDAGOGY OF RELATIONS; The Students; Those Parenting (Whanau); The Principals; The Teachers; Interpretation of the Narratives of Experience: Development of the Analytical Model; Discursive Positioning; Implications for Pedagogy; RESPONSIVE AND SUSTAINABLE CLASSROOM PRACTICES; USES OF THE NARRATIVES
    Description / Table of Contents: 1. The Concept of Discourse is Useful2. Collaborative Storying Acknowledges Lived Realities; Traditional/Discursive Classrooms; The Role of Questions in Teaching and Learning; 3. Theories of Practice; 4. The Professional Development Process; 5. The Effective Teaching Profile; MANAAKITANGA; MANA MOTUHAKE; NGA WHAKAPIRINGATANGA; WANANGA; AKO; KOTAHITANGA; PART C: CONCLUSIONS; NOTES; CHAPTER 3: FREEING SCHOOLS AND EDUCATION SYSTEMS FROM NEO-COLONIAL DOMINANCE1; PART A: TOWARDS A MODEL FOR SCALABILITY; Application of the Model to a Variety of Settings; GPILSEO AT THE CLASSROOM LEVEL
    Description / Table of Contents: GPILSEO AT THE SCHOOL LEVELGPILSEO AT THE SYSTEM LEVEL; PART B: SCHOOL LEADERSHIP; Leadership has an Overall Purpose; DISTRIBUTED LEADERSHIP; The Qualities of Effective Leadership; 1. Effective Leaders Establish and Develop Specific Measurable Goals so thatProgress can be Shown, Monitored over Time, and Acted Upon; Professional Development Staff Need to Support Teachers to set Goals; 2. Effective Leaders Promote and Support Pedagogic Reform; Creating, Promoting, and Developing Professional Learning Communities; 3. Effective Leaders Redesign the Institutional and Organisational Framework
    Description / Table of Contents: 4. Effective Leaders Spread the Reform to Include those Traditionally Marginalised
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Rotterdam : SensePublishers
    ISBN: 9789460914966
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VII, 97p, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T.
    Keywords: Education ; Foreign study Education ; Teachers Training of ; Multicultural education ; Teachers—Training of. ; Education
    Abstract: Preliminary Material /Thomas Goetz , Gerit Jaritz and Fritz Oser -- Introduction /Thomas Goetz , Gerit Jaritz and Fritz Oser -- Developing a Culture of (Inter)national Mobility in Initial Teacher Training Expectations, Limitations and Ways Forward /Gerit Jaritz -- Working with Incoming Students: Culturally Responsive Teaching in Higher Education /Dora Luginbühl -- I wanted to Go to Spain but I Ended up in Finland – Analysis of and Conclusions About Student Exchange /Matti Meri -- Reflection on Normality: The Benefits of International Student Exchange for Teacher Education /Bruno Leutwyler and Samantha Lottenbach -- Staff Mobility in Europe: A Twelve-Year-Old Programme /Armand Henrion -- Conclusion /Gerit Jaritz , Thomas Goetz and Fritz Oser -- Authors /Thomas Goetz , Gerit Jaritz and Fritz Oser.
    Abstract: The book focuses on the pains and gains of international mobility in teacher education—its challenges and benefits. The aim is on the one hand to identify some of the challenges which help to explain the low percentage of internationally orientated teacher education students and suggest how to overcome them. On the other hand, major benefits of international mobility in teacher education are presented in the form of competences that can be acquired through studying and teaching abroad. The five chapters of this book refer to reports on practical experiences with international mobility in teacher education at different institutions. The authors outline problems, challenges and advantages, as well as present empirical studies on the international mobility of teachers. The target audience are persons organizing mobility programmes or educators working with international students and researchers in this field
    Description / Table of Contents: Pains and Gains of International Mobility in Teacher Education; TABLE OF CONTENTS; PREFACE; INTRODUCTION; OBJECTIVES AND CONTENTS; INTERCULTURAL LEARNING AS A KEY COMPETENCE FOR PROFESSIONALIZATION; REFERENCES; DEVELOPING A CULTURE OF (INTER)NATIONAL MOBILITY IN INITIAL TEACHER TRAINING: EXPECTATIONS, LIMITATIONS AND WAYS FORWARD; 1. SCHOOLS AND TEACHER EDUCATION IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBALIZATION AND MIGRATION; 2. HOW MOBILE ARE FUTURE TEACHERS?; 3. SWISS UNIVERSITIES OF TEACHER EDUCATION AND STUDENT MOBILITY; 3.1 Current Efforts
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.2 The Mobility Concept of the University of Teacher Education Thurgau (PHTG) as an Example4. MOBILITY IN TEACHER EDUCATION: NECESSITY OR NICE-TO-HAVE? EXPECTATIONS AND LIMITATIONS; 4.1 Expectations; 4.2 Challenges and Areas of Difficulty; 5. A SURVEY OF THREE YEARS OF STUDENT MOBILITY IN PRIMARY TEACHER EDUCATION; 5.1 Selected Results; 5.1.1 Reasons for Mobility and Criteria for Selection of Host University; 5.1.2 Perceived Values and Learning Outcomes; 5.1.3 Self-Perception after Mobility Experience; 5.2 Conclusion; 6. REAPING THE BENEFITS AND ENSURING SUSTAINABILITY
    Description / Table of Contents: 7. FUTURE NEEDS AND DEVELOPMENTSNOTES; REFERENCES; WORKING WITH INCOMING STUDENTS: CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION; 1. INTRODUCTION; 2. IMPARTING INTERCULTURAL COMPETENCES AND INTERNATIONALIZATION AT UNIVERSITIES OF TEACHER EDUCATION; 2.1 Culturally Responsive Teaching in Teacher Education; 2.2 Multicultural Students as Stimulation for Intercultural Learning Processes; 3. TEACHING AND LEARNING WITH INCOMING STUDENTS - EXPLORATIONS INTO THEORY AND RESEARCH; 3.1 The Significance of Internationalization in Higher Education
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.2 Well-Being of Incoming Students at Their Host University3.3 Language as a Central Communication Aid in Learning; 3.4 Learning - Learning Styles and Learning Strategies From an Intercultural Point of View; 4. INTERCULTURAL EDUCATION AT UNIVERSITY LEVEL - A CONCEPT OF ACADEMIC TEACHING FOR MULTICULTURAL GROUPS OF STUDENTS; 4.1 Establishing Inclusion; 4.2 Developing Attitude; 4.3 Enhancing Meaning; 4.4 Engendering Competence; 4.5 Critical Objections to the Concept of Teaching; 5. SURVEY AND REPORTS OF INCOMING STUDENTS AT THE PHTG; 5.1 The Incoming Students' Cultural Background
    Description / Table of Contents: 5.2 Key-Topics from the Perspective of Incoming Students5.2.1 Developing Attitude; 5.2.2 Enhancing Meaning Curriculum Contents and Possibilities of Transferring the Acquired Skills:; 5.2.3 Engendering Competence Requirements and Assessment:; 5.2.4 Establishing Inclusion Social Support:; 6. FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE TEACHING AT UNIVERSITIES OF TEACHER EDUCATION; 6.1 Institutional Level; 6.1.1 Curriculum Contents and Teaching Conceptions; 6.1.2 Persons in Charge of Mobility and International Relations; 6.1.3 Place of Residence; 6.1.4 Workload of the Staff
    Description / Table of Contents: 6.2 Level of Teaching and Staff
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Rotterdam : SensePublishers
    ISBN: 9789460914751
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXI, 265p, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T.
    Keywords: Education ; Education ; Minorities Education ; Multicultural education ; Educational sociology.
    Abstract: Preliminary Material /Merike Darmody , Naomi Tyrrell and Steve Song -- Who is Afraid of Multilingualism? /Francesca La Morgia -- Głos, Voce, Voice /Rory Mc Daid -- The New Kid on the Block /Niamh Nestor and Vera Regan -- Indian Young People Negotiating Transnational Identities /Angela Veale and Emily Kennedy -- Securing Migrant Children’s Educational Well-Being /Dympna Devine -- The Mobility of Racism in Education /Karl Kitching -- ‘They Think the Book is Right and I am Wrong’ /Audrey Bryan and Melíosa Bracken -- Religious Diversity and Schooling in Ireland /Emer Smyth and Merike Darmody -- Barriers to School Involvement /Merike Darmody and Selina McCoy -- Immigrant Child Well-Being and Cultural Capital /Bryan Fanning , Trutz Haase and Neil O’Boyle -- Immigrant Children in Ireland /Michal Molcho , Colette Kelly and Saoirse Nic Gabhainn -- Child Trafficking in Ireland /Deirdre Horgan , Shirley Martin and Jacqui O’Riordan -- Relationships with Family, Friends and God /Muireann Ní Raghallaigh -- Policy Responses to Unaccompanied Minors in Ireland /Corona Joyce and Emma Quinn -- Conclusion /Merike Darmody , Naomi Tyrrell and Steve Song -- Biographical Notes of Book Authors /Merike Darmody , Naomi Tyrrell and Steve Song.
    Abstract: Before the economic boom of the 1990s, Ireland was known as a nation of emigrants. The past fifteen years, however, have seen the transformation of Ireland from a country of net emigration to one of net immigration, on a scale and at a pace unprecedented in comparative context. As a result, Irish society has become more diverse in terms of nationality, language, ethnicity and religious affiliation; and these changes are now clearly reflected in the composition of both primary and secondary schools, presenting these with challenges as well as opportunities. Despite the increased number of ethnically-diverse immigrant children and young people in the Ireland, currently there is a paucity of information about aspects of their lives in Ireland. This book is aimed at contributing to this gap in knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: The Changing Faces of Ireland; TABLE OF CONTENTS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; FOREWORD; INTRODUCTION: Exploring the Lives of Immigrant and Ethnic Minority Children in Ireland; DEFINITIONS; RECENT IMMIGRATION TO IRELAND; IMMIGRANT AND ETHNIC MINORITY CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE IN IRELAND; AIM OF THE BOOK; NOTES; REFERENCES; PART 1: IMMIGRATION, IDENTITIES AND LANGUAGE; 1. WHO IS AFRAID OF MULTILINGUALISM?: Evaluating the Linguistic Impact of Migration in Ireland; INTRODUCTION; MULTILINGUAL FAMILIES; Family I - Italian-Irish couple.; Family II - Italian-Irish couple.; Family III - Italian couple.
    Description / Table of Contents: Family IV - Italian couple.Family V - Italian-French couple.; Family VI - One parent family - Italian mother.; MULTILINGUAL EDUCATION; MULTILINGUAL IRELAND; NOTES; REFERENCES; 2. GLOS, VOCE, VOICE: Minority Language Children Reflect on the Recognitionof their First Languages in Irish Primary Schools; INTRODUCTION; MULTILINGUAL IRELAND: SOCIETY AND SCHOOLS; First Languages in Irish Schools; FIRST LANGUAGE RECOGNITION AS AN ISSUE OF EQUALITY; Misrecognition, Inequality and Schooling; Misrecognition, Self-identity and Family Relations; Pedagogical Importance of First Languages
    Description / Table of Contents: Linguistic Interdependence PrincipleMETHODOLOGY; LINGUISTIC OUTSIDERS; PEDAGOGUES, POWER AND PERPETUATION; NOTES; REFERENCES; 3. THE NEW KID ON THE BLOCK: A Case Study of Young Poles, Language and Identity; INTRODUCTION; LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL IDENTITY; POLISH MIGRATION TO IRELAND; METHODOLOGY; THE YOUNG POLISH PEOPLE IN THIS STUDY; ETHNOGRAPHIC QUESTIONNAIRE; THE CASE STUDY; The School and the Participant; Language as an Investment in the Future; Language and the Identity of 'the Fretful, Frustrated Parent'; Language and the Identity of 'the New Kid on the Block'
    Description / Table of Contents: Language, Resistance and Ruptured IdentitiesCONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; 4. INDIAN YOUNG PEOPLE NEGOTIATING TRANSNATIONAL IDENTITIES; INTRODUCTION; THEORETICAL UNDERPINNINGS; DATA AND METHODOLOGY; AGENCY AND POWER (LESSNESS) IN TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION; Facing a Transnational Threat to Identity.; Future Selves: Multiple Possibilities; Identifying as a Transnational Agent of Political Change; CONCLUSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; PART 2: IMMIGRATION, EDUCATION AND SCHOOLING; 5. SECURING MIGRANT CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONAL WELL-BEING: Perspectives on Policy and Practice in Irish Schools; INTRODUCTION
    Description / Table of Contents: CHILDREN, MIGRATION AND SCHOOLINGTHEORISING MIGRANT CHILDREN'S PERSPECTIVES: AGENCY, IDENTITIES AND BELONGING; MOBILIZING CAPITALS THROUGH CHILDREN'S LEARNING; WHO IS' (SE) NORMAL, WHO '(SE) CULTURE?; SOCIAL AND RACIAL DYNAMICS IN CHILDREN'S PEER RELATIONS: MOBILIZING SOCIAL CAPITAL; CONCLUDING DISCUSSION; NOTES; REFERENCES; 6. THE MOBILITY OF RACISM IN EDUCATION: Contested Discourses and New Migrant Subjectivities in Irish Schooling; INTRODUCTION; ONGOING PROBLEMS WITH THE RECOGNITION OF INSTITUTIONAL RACISM; Ongoing Racisms and the Politics of Definition in Anti-racist Institutions
    Description / Table of Contents: ANTI-RACIST TENSIONS AND RACIST CONTINUITIES: THE SUBJECTIVE UPTAKE OF KNOWLEDGE OF EXCLUSION
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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