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E-raamat: Community Participation with Schools in Developing Countries: Towards Equitable and Inclusive Basic Education for All [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (International Christian University, Japan)
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The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) (2016-2030) set by the United Nations in 2015 restated the importance of universal primary education for all, and specifically discuss quality, equity, and inclusion in basic education. To achieve this, the role of community has been emphasized and participation has become a "buzzword" in international development over the past several decades. Despite the growing attention to community participation in school management, previous literature has shown mixed results in terms of its actual practice and its impacts on quality, equity, and inclusion in education.

This book deepens the contextual understanding of community in developing countries and its involvement in schools in general, and its impact on quality, equity, and inclusion of school education in particular. By presenting various case studies in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and a post-conflict state in Europe, the book analyses commonalities and differences in the ways communities are involved and cast their impacts and challenges. The book contributes knowledge on the ways in which community involvement could work in developing countries, the detailed processes and factors that make community participation work in different dimensions, and remaining challenges that scholars and practitioners still need to be concerned and mindful in the field.

This book will appeal to both researchers and practitioners who are concerned about the community participation approach for the SDGs.
List of illustrations
viii
Author biographies x
Foreword xii
1 Introduction
1(6)
Mikiko Nishimura
PART I Revisiting the theoretical framework
7(50)
2 Community participation: Policy discourses and controversies
9(17)
James H. Williams
Romina Kasman
Paromita De
Meng Zhou
Ana Gonzalez
3 School-based management: Theory and empirical evidence
26(18)
Angela Demas
4 Can communities mobilize for schooling and learning?: Bottom-up perspectives from Pratham in India
44(13)
Rukmini Banerji
PART II Case studies on stakeholder relationships and accountability
57(62)
5 Community participation in school management, relational trust, and teacher motivation toward pupils' learning outcomes: A case study from Ghana
59(16)
Kazuro Shiruya
6 Connecting parental involvement, adult education, and community organizing through social justice leadership: Lessons from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
75(13)
D. Brent Edwards Jr
David Dematthews
Anne Spear
Hillary Hartley
7 Educational development through community-wide collaboration: How to establish a sustainable community-wide initiative to improve education
88(15)
Nobuhiro Kunieda
Takao Maruyama
Akiko Kageyama
Masahiro Hara
8 Information sharing and community participation: The case of the Maasai community in Kenya
103(16)
Tetsuya Yamada
Mikiko Nishimura
PART III Case studies on the role of community for equity and inclusion
119(44)
9 Community participation in school governance in a post-conflict society: The case of school boards in Brcko in Bosnia and Herzegovina
121(14)
Taro Komatsu
10 The acceptance situation of inclusive education in Kenya: Perceptions of parents, communities, and teachers
135(14)
Jun Kawaguchi
11 The role of peers as community in youth education and employment in East Africa
149(14)
Nancy Pellowski Wiger
PART IV Case studies on community participation and learning outcomes
163(75)
12 Quality learning through community-wide collaboration: A methodology to overcome the "learning crisis" in Niger
165(19)
Masahiro Hara
Takao Maruyama
Akiko Kageyama
Nobuhiro Kunieda
13 School autonomy and learning outcomes in Burkina Faso and Senegal
184(14)
Takako Yuki
Kengo Igei
14 False advertising and first principles: Misrepresentation of research evidence from El Salvador and the need to change the paradigm of community based management
198(13)
D. Brent Edwards Jr
15 School-based management and learning outcomes: Experimental evidence
211(19)
Vicente A. Garcia-Moreno
Paul Gertler
Harry Anthony Patrinos
16 Conclusion: Resetting the scene
230(8)
Mikiko Nishimura
Index 238
Mikiko Nishimura is a Professor at the College of Liberal Arts, International Christian University, Japan. She was recently a visiting scholar in the Graduate School of Education and Human Development at George Washington University, USA. She has published extensively on international development and education in both journals and books.