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Learner-centred Education in International Perspective: Whose pedagogy for whose development? [Pehme köide]

(University of Glasgow, UK)
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Is learner-centred education appropriate for all societies and classrooms?

Learner-centred education (LCE) is a travelling policy, widely promoted by international agencies and national governments. Arguments in favour of this pedagogical tradition refer to theories and evidence from cognitive psychology, claiming that all learners can benefit equally from its judicious use. Beyond the benefits to the individual however, lie a set of assumptions about learner-centred education as a foundation for the building of democratic citizens and societies, suitable for economies of the future. These promises have been questioned by critics who doubt that it is appropriate in all cultural and resource contexts, and there is considerable evidence in the global South of perennial problems of implementation.

In the light of these debates, is LCE still a good development ‘bet’? This book provides an authoritative and balanced investigation of these issues, exploring the contextual factors from global movements to local resourcing realities which have fuelled it as a discourse and affected its practice. In the light of the theoretical underpinnings and research evidence, the book addresses pressing questions: to what extent is learner-centred education a sound choice for policy and practice in developing countries? And if it is a sound choice, under which conditions is it a viable one?

The book is divided into three key parts:

- Learner-centred Education as a Global Phenomenon
- Learner-centred Education in Lower and Middle-income Countries
- Lessons and Resolutions

This book provides a much-needed fresh analysis of the concept and practice of LCE. It will be valuable reading for academics and post-graduates with a focus on comparative and international education, along with policy-makers in developing countries and development agencies.

Acknowledgements ix
Acronyms x
List of figures and tables
xii
1 Introduction
1(6)
PART I Learner-centred education as a global phenomenon
7(52)
2 Learner-centred education: Definitions and provenance
9(12)
3 Three justificatory narratives: Cognition, emancipation and preparation
21(16)
4 Contexts for learner-centred education: Global, national and local
37(22)
PART II Learner-centred education in lower- and middle-income countries
59(64)
5 Learner-centred education as a promising but problematic policy in the Global South
61(14)
6 The Gambia: The intersection of the global and the local in a small developing country
75(11)
7 Moving towards learner-centred education: China's multiple paradoxes
86(9)
8 Russia: Shifting and resilient narratives on the `educated person'
95(10)
9 South Africa's emancipatory policy discourses and classroom realities
105(11)
10 Mobile students and new learner-centred pedagogies
116(7)
PART III Lessons and resolutions
123(32)
11 Ten key lessons from theory, evidence and cases
125(17)
12 Towards a contextualised learner-centred pedagogical nexus
142(13)
Notes 155(4)
References 159(15)
Index 174
Michele Schweisfurth is Chair in Comparative and International Education at the School of Education, University of Glasgow. She is also the editor of the journal Comparative Education.