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This volume presents how high performing education systems over the world are constantly innovating their educational policies to nurture their citizens for the challenges of the future economy and the anticipation of the unknown. This volume includes a state-of-the-art review of the literature in this field, several commissioned focal chapters focusing on the distinctive case of Singapore and internationally commissioned chapters of several other accomplished education systems around the world. A comparative study of Singapore against other high performing education systems is included to provide greater insights to the possible applications to other education systems.
Education --- Education and state. --- Evaluation. --- Education policy --- Educational policy --- State and education --- Government policy --- Education. --- International education. --- Comparative education. --- Educational policy. --- ducation and state. --- Higher education. --- Educational Policy and Politics. --- Higher Education. --- International and Comparative Education. --- Educational Philosophy. --- Philosophy. --- College students --- Higher education --- Postsecondary education --- Universities and colleges --- Social policy --- Endowment of research --- Education, Comparative --- Global education --- Intellectual cooperation --- Internationalism --- Children --- Education, Primitive --- Education of children --- Human resource development --- Instruction --- Pedagogy --- Schooling --- Students --- Youth --- Civilization --- Learning and scholarship --- Mental discipline --- Schools --- Teaching --- Training --- History --- Education, Higher. --- International education . --- Education—Philosophy.
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Social sciences (general) --- Sociology of education --- Curriculum development --- Teaching --- Educational sciences --- onderwijspolitiek --- sociale wetenschappen --- onderwijssociologie --- curriculumontwikkeling --- onderwijsonderzoek --- Asia
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This volume presents how high performing education systems over the world are constantly innovating their educational policies to nurture their citizens for the challenges of the future economy and the anticipation of the unknown. This volume includes a state-of-the-art review of the literature in this field, several commissioned focal chapters focusing on the distinctive case of Singapore and internationally commissioned chapters of several other accomplished education systems around the world. A comparative study of Singapore against other high performing education systems is included to provide greater insights to the possible applications to other education systems.
Philosophy --- Teaching --- Higher education --- Educational sciences --- HO (hoger onderwijs) --- onderwijspolitiek --- onderwijsfilosofie --- onderwijs --- onderwijsonderzoek
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The Springer International Handbook of Educational Development in Asia Pacific is organised to provide research-based information on education development in Asia Pacific. The Handbook contains 13 sections and over 150 chapters, covering a wide spectrum of areas including equity and quality in education, language education, learning and human development, lifelong learning, workplace learning and job-skill changes, teacher education and professionalization, higher education development, globalisation, citizenship and moral education, and performance of Asia-Pacific students in international achievement tests. With its international scholarship, the Handbook offers academic discourse and analyses that can be examined worldwide but understood from Asian perspectives, and examined in Asian contexts.
International education. --- Comparative education. --- Education. --- International and Comparative Education.
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Based on case studies of 11 societies in the world’s most dynamic region, this book signals a new direction of study at the intersection of citizenship education and the curriculum. Following their successful volume, Citizenship Education in Asia and the Pacific: Concepts and Issues (published as No. 14 in this series), the editors, widely regarded as leaders in the field in the Asia-Pacific region, have gone beyond broad citizenship education frameworks to examine the realities, tensions and pressures that influence the formation of the citizenship curriculum. Chapter authors from different societies have addressed two fundamental questions: (1) how is citizenship education featured in the current curriculum reform agenda in terms of both policy contexts and values; and (2) to what extent do the reforms in citizenship education reflect current debates within the society? From comparative analysis of these 11 case studies the editors have found a complex picture of curriculum reform that indicates deep tensions between global and local agendas. On one hand, there is substantial evidence of an increasingly common policy rhetoric in the debates about citizenship education. On the other, it is evident that this discourse does not necessarily extend to citizenship curriculum, which in most places continues to be constructed according to distinctive social, political and cultural contexts. Whether the focus is on Islamic values in Pakistan, an emerging discourse about Chinese ‘democracy’, a nostalgic conservatism in Australia, or a continuing nation-building project in Malaysia – the cases show that distinctive social values and ideologies construct national citizenship curricula in Asian contexts even in this increasingly globalized era. This impressive collection of case studies of a diverse group of societies informs and enriches understanding of the complex relationship between citizenship education and the curriculum both regionally and globally.
Citizenship --- Civics --- Study and teaching --- Civics, American --- Political ethics --- Political science --- Social ethics --- Social sciences --- Birthright citizenship --- Citizenship (International law) --- National citizenship --- Nationality (Citizenship) --- Public law --- Allegiance --- Domicile --- Political rights --- Law and legislation --- Curriculum planning. --- Social sciences. --- International and Comparative Education. --- Curriculum Studies. --- Educational Policy and Politics. --- Sociology of Education. --- Social Sciences, general. --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization --- Curriculum development --- Education --- Instructional systems --- Planning --- Curricula --- Design --- International education . --- Comparative education. --- Curriculums (Courses of study). --- Education—Curricula. --- Educational policy. --- Education and state. --- Educational sociology. --- Education and sociology --- Social problems in education --- Society and education --- Sociology, Educational --- Sociology --- Education policy --- Educational policy --- State and education --- Social policy --- Endowment of research --- Core curriculum --- Courses of study --- Curricula (Courses of study) --- Curriculums (Courses of study) --- Schools --- Study, Courses of --- Education, Comparative --- Global education --- Intellectual cooperation --- Internationalism --- Aims and objectives --- Government policy --- History
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How are students in Asia and the Pacific taught to be effective citizens? Following two successful volumes previously published in this series, Citizenship Education in Asia and the Pacific: Concepts and Issues and Citizenship Curriculum in Asia and the Pacific, this volume focuses on citizenship pedagogies that are promoted by governments in the region, advocated by scholars, and adapted in the schools and classrooms where citizenship education takes place every day. Thirteen case studies from diverse societies in Asia and the Pacific highlight the ways in which teachers and students think about, experience or plan for citizenship teaching and learning. Different methods – vignettes, student surveys, case studies and literature reviews – are used to portray these experiences, from both macro- and micro-analytic perspectives. The wide array of case studies provides rich information and insights into the realities and possibilities of pedagogies for citizenship across the region.
Citizenship --- Civics --- Study and teaching --- Civics, American --- Curriculum planning. --- Social sciences. --- International and Comparative Education. --- Curriculum Studies. --- Educational Policy and Politics. --- Sociology of Education. --- Social Sciences, general. --- Political ethics --- Political science --- Social ethics --- Social sciences --- Birthright citizenship --- Citizenship (International law) --- National citizenship --- Nationality (Citizenship) --- Public law --- Allegiance --- Domicile --- Political rights --- Law and legislation --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization --- Curriculum development --- Education --- Instructional systems --- Planning --- Curricula --- Design --- International education . --- Comparative education. --- Curriculums (Courses of study). --- Education—Curricula. --- Educational policy. --- Education and state. --- Educational sociology. --- Education and sociology --- Social problems in education --- Society and education --- Sociology, Educational --- Sociology --- Education policy --- Educational policy --- State and education --- Social policy --- Endowment of research --- Core curriculum --- Courses of study --- Curricula (Courses of study) --- Curriculums (Courses of study) --- Schools --- Study, Courses of --- Education, Comparative --- Global education --- Intellectual cooperation --- Internationalism --- Aims and objectives --- Government policy --- History
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How are students in Asia and the Pacific taught to be effective citizens? Following two successful volumes previously published in this series, Citizenship Education in Asia and the Pacific: Concepts and Issues and Citizenship Curriculum in Asia and the Pacific, this volume focuses on citizenship pedagogies that are promoted by governments in the region, advocated by scholars, and adapted in the schools and classrooms where citizenship education takes place every day. Thirteen case studies from diverse societies in Asia and the Pacific highlight the ways in which teachers and students think about, experience or plan for citizenship teaching and learning. Different methods - vignettes, student surveys, case studies and literature reviews - are used to portray these experiences, from both macro- and micro-analytic perspectives. The wide array of case studies provides rich information and insights into the realities and possibilities of pedagogies for citizenship across the region.
Social sciences (general) --- Sociology of education --- Curriculum development --- Teaching --- Educational sciences --- onderwijspolitiek --- sociale wetenschappen --- onderwijssociologie --- curriculumontwikkeling --- onderwijsonderzoek
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Based on case studies of 11 societies in the world's most dynamic region, this book signals a new direction of study at the intersection of citizenship education and the curriculum. Following their successful volume, Citizenship Education in Asia and the Pacific: Concepts and Issues (published as No. 14 in this series), the editors, widely regarded as leaders in the field in the Asia-Pacific region, have gone beyond broad citizenship education frameworks to examine the realities, tensions and pressures that influence the formation of the citizenship curriculum. Chapter authors from different societies have addressed two fundamental questions: (1) how is citizenship education featured in the current curriculum reform agenda in terms of both policy contexts and values; and (2) to what extent do the reforms in citizenship education reflect current debates within the society? From comparative analysis of these 11 case studies the editors have found a complex picture of curriculum reform that indicates deep tensions between global and local agendas. On one hand, there is substantial evidence of an increasingly common policy rhetoric in the debates about citizenship education. On the other, it is evident that this discourse does not necessarily extend to citizenship curriculum, which in most places continues to be constructed according to distinctive social, political and cultural contexts. Whether the focus is on Islamic values in Pakistan, an emerging discourse about Chinese democracy', a nostalgic conservatism in Australia, or a continuing nation-building project in Malaysia - the cases show that distinctive social values and ideologies construct national citizenship curricula in Asian contexts even in this increasingly globalized era. This impressive collection of case studies of a diverse group of societies informs and enriches understanding of the complex relationship between citizenship education and the curriculum both regionally and globally.
Social sciences (general) --- Sociology of education --- Curriculum development --- School management --- Educational sciences --- vergelijkende pedagogiek --- onderwijspolitiek --- sociale wetenschappen --- onderwijssociologie --- curriculumontwikkeling --- Asia
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