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Learning as Development: Rethinking International Education in a Changing World [Kõva köide]

(University of Pennsylvania, USA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 324 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 589 g, 11 Tables, black and white; 70 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Oct-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1848726066
  • ISBN-13: 9781848726062
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 324 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 589 g, 11 Tables, black and white; 70 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Oct-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1848726066
  • ISBN-13: 9781848726062
Teised raamatud teemal:

Learning is the foundation of the human experience. It begins at birth and never stops, a continuous and malleable link across life stages of human development. Disparities in learning access and outcomes around the world have deep consequences for income, social mobility, health, and well-being. For international development practitioners faced with today's unprecedented environmental and geopolitical pressures, learning should be viewed as a touchstone and target for those seeking to truly effect global change. This book traces the path of international development work—from its pre-colonial origins to the emergence of economics as the dominant discipline in the field—and lays out a new agenda for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners, from early education through adulthood. Learning as Development is an attempt to rethink international education in a changing world.

Arvustused

Learning as Development by Daniel Wagner could be the most comprehensive, book-length monograph [ in over 3 decades] to address the relationship between education and "development." Wagners audacious attempt is to reorient readers toward development in non-economic and non-institutional terms by discussing "individual learners and their context." The book focuses on the poor and marginalized, arriving just in time for the vigorous debates about education for sustainability. The text has the virtue of using simple and clear terms quite accessible to the undergraduate student reader and on-the-job teaching or service personnel, as well as to those more experienced in the study of the field. The discussion is pertinently centered on the educational fortunes of the poor and marginalized in developing countries and puts to good use both the authors great breadth of personal experience and an ample trove of data, literature references, charts, and graphs. Wagner has thus written the first book in decades to present such a wide-ranging synthesis of learning in comparative and international contexts and as a key to progress. The volume is scholarly, with a reference list of over 800 titles, 500 footnotes, dozens of figures and graphics, and a dense, 10-page index. In summary, Learning as Development seems to us a landmark attempt to begin building a new vision for the international development education field. It moves the discussion well forward and offers both trenchant observations about a variety of individual learning subjects and a wealth of relevant resources. David Post, Penn State University and Peter Easton, Florida State University, in the Comparative Education Review.

In Learning as development Wagner builds the case for the importance of learning and education through a series of issue-oriented chapters, beginning with the troubled history of colonialism and empire building. Empire builders generally did not understand or acknowledge local values and modes of living, and often assumed they had the right (or duty) to dominate peoples whom they saw as less fortunate. Too often, the result for many people has been poverty and an increasing gap between the rich and the poor. Wagner discusses the traditional roles of economists, sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists, and psychologists, pointing out both the shortcomings and the contributions of each, and stressing the need for solutions that focus on human development and that extend beyond the limits of any particular discipline. The most important chapter may be the one dealing with globalization and environment. Here, Wagner shows the compelling relation between education and environmental vulnerability and sustainability, including the fact that climate change disasters have already produced degradation of education in a number of developing countries. Poverty, he argues, replicates itself from one generation to the next, and it is learning that holds the promise of improved life quality. Wagner has assembled a readable, wide-ranging array of empirical sources that, taken together, help to illuminate both the promise and the problems associated with learning in developing countries. Kenneth D. Keith, University of San Diego, in the American Journal of Psychology.

In Learning as Development: Rethinking International Education in a Changing World, Wagner notes that in international agencies, economists have played the leading role in designing development policies and programs. In contrast to economic criteria, he proposes foregrounding educational outcomes as the yardstick for determining a countrys success and, in poor countries, their progress towards development. The chapters present a scholarly look at how international agencies approach education and howthis might be improved. Students, researchers, policymakers, and other interested readers will find current statistics, citations, and extensive annotations accompanying each chapter. In this sense, Learning as Development is an important reference for understanding current trends in development and education policies in the international arena. Judy Kalman and Roberto Méndez-Arreola, Center for Research and Advanced Studies of the Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Mexico, in Educational Review.

I think this is an excellent text with wide appeal. I could envision using this text as a foundational volume across my undergraduate and post-graduate courses. ... Wagner highlights how the lenses of economics, sociology, political science, psychology, anthropology, and interdisciplinarity frame development programs and problems as well as the possibilities for solutions. [ O]verall the text includes a rich description of many foundational ideas and approaches to education and international development. The detailed endnotes at the back of every chapter are very beneficial; some readers may even want to keep one finger in the endnotes to attain as much insight as possible. All things considered, I believe the scope and focus of this text is a remarkable feat for an introductory text. - Matthew A. M. Thomas, University of Sydney, in Journal of the World Council of Comparative Education Societies

Learning as Development offers a comprehensive review of major issues related to education in developing countries, with a particular focus on lifelong learning among the most marginalized people. Wagner draws on his deep experience in international education research, policy, and practice, proposing a new approach to international development work that centers not on economic growth but on human development, measured through learning. This book is a useful resource for students and scholars of international education and development. At a time defined by rising temperatures and growing inequality, Wagner rethinks international development, centering it not around economic growth but, rather, human development driven by learning. His is a timely message and one with important implications for education development that supports life-long learning for individuals and communities around the world. - Celia Reddick, Harvard University, in Harvard Educational Review

Wagner achieves an impressive, well-referenced overview of many of the pressing issues related to learning when considered on a global scale [ Learning as Development] appears to be directed at graduate students of international education, offering as it does an overview of a range of related issues together with copious evidence for the arguments made, but it would equally be enlightening reading for policymakers seriously interested in learning equity within or across nations... The main strength of the book, is that it repeatedly stresses the need for individual jurisdictions and communities within those - to develop their own priorities for learning, including through local languages so central to identity, access and empowerment. - Jennie Golding, University College London - Institute of Education, in London Review of Education

[ Learning as Development] is an accessible and highly informative text for those studying education and international development. The extensive use of detailed footnotes provides a wealth of evidence from research, policy and practice that will provide useful starting points for those undertaking their own investigations in this field. This authoritative account, including a foreword by the Director General of UNESCO, reflects Wagners significant research expertise and extensive practical experience in the arena of international development This ambitious book seeks to conceptualize learning as development as a foundational approach to international development. - Philip Bamber, Liverpool Hope University, in the British Journal of Educational Studies

In Learning as Development: Rethinking International Education in a Changing World Wagner strikes the rare balance between breadth and brevity. In just 267 pages, including detailed notes, he weaves a history of international development, a review of research in the learning sciences, and a novel approach to "development as learning." Learnings title draws comparison to Amartya Sens 1999 Development as Freedom, and the two books are complementary. Both writers call for a turn to human development over economic growth. With Learning, Wagner offers a great gift to those of us who believe learning should enjoy pride of place in international development discourses. He also leaves a challenge: to prevent learning from becoming just another international development buzzword and to achieve its promise to transform the very processes by which we work together across lines of privilege and geography for the betterment of humankind. Jonathan Marino, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Anthropology & Education Quarterly,

Daniel Wagners Learning as development is an important contribution The book is well-written, engaging the readers with perspectives, stories, research and data. According to Wagner, the shift from the "economic growth" models to a human and sustainable development approach has necessitated a need to rethink education in the context of international development, particularly with reference to equity vis-à-vis poor and marginalized communities. The book carefully avoids romanticizing education and learning. The Western "banking" pedagogy criticized by Paulo Freire and "The World Educational Crisis" of Coombs are referred to readers, calling upon them to introspect their own educational system. [ This book] is a highly significant addition to the debate on the role of education and learning in development and has the potential to guide stakeholders such as policy makers and practitioners.- K. Balasubramanian, Commonwealth of Learning, in the Journal of Learning for Development.

A core dynamic informing the book is Wagners view that too much attention has been focused on simply ensuring increases in school participation, and too little on the quality and relevance of what is learned hence the insistence of the title that we should focus on learning as of tutor absenteeism, the resource gap between urban and rural schools, the impossibility of securing adequate attention for each child when up to a hundred children crowd into a single classroom. He recognises the concern of aid agencies that if money is to be well spent, there needs to be effective monitoring of the learning undertaken. - Alan Tuckett, University of Wolverhampton, in International Review of Education

This book greatly advances our knowledge and understanding of how to improve learning for all--especially for those who have been most marginalized, such as the poor, girls and women, indigenous populations, migrants and those impacted by climate change. It is especially welcome as the world moves towards implementing the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. - Irina Bokova, Director-General, UNESCO

Unparalleled in scope and depth and with case material from numerous cultures in the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. This is a long-awaited book on educational development. - Robert A. Levine, Roy E. Larsen Professor Emeritus, Harvard University

Learning as Development is a great read. The depth of discussion and the literature it draws on has a wealth of resources. My students really need this. Thumbs up for this excellent book! - Moses Oketch, Professor, Institute of Education, University College London

A well-researched and comprehensive volume with critical insights on improving education that will help make a difference in the world today and tomorrow. - Archbishop Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, Chancellor, Pontifical Academy of Sciences, The Vatican

This is a refreshing, accessible volume that combines scholarship with thoughtful descriptions of learning from many cultures; it humanizes and broadens the discussion of education and development. - Marlaine Lockheed, World Bank and Center for Global Development

Excellent! It is time to walk the talk! This incisive and thoughtful book should be read by policy makers as well as those who engage in the everyday critical work of education and development. - Adama Samassekou, Minister of Education, Mali

Foreword xi
Irina Bokova
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xiv
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
xvi
Introduction: Toward a New Understanding of Development 1(6)
Lessons From a Spring Day in Al-Kataba
1(2)
Learning and Society
3(1)
Structure of This Book
4(1)
Evidence
5(1)
Advancing the Social Good
6(1)
PART I Development
7(72)
1 International Development
9(25)
Izel: The Legacy of Colonialism in Yucatan
9(1)
Colonialism and Early International Development
10(1)
Bretton Woods and the Origins of Economic Development
11(3)
Culture and Poverty
14(3)
The Social Sciences of Development
17(8)
The Arc of International Development
25(9)
2 Human Development: A Life-Span Approach
34(20)
Sangay: Well-Being in Bhutan
34(1)
Defining Human Development
35(6)
Human Development and International Development
41(4)
United Nations Development Goals
45(4)
An Expansive View of Human Development
49(5)
3 Learning as Development
54(25)
Naima: The Kuttab and the Souk in Morocco
54(1)
What Is Learning?
55(2)
Learning Contexts and Practices
57(1)
A Framework for Learning
57(4)
Learning Curves: Time, Responsive Environments, and Opportunity
61(2)
Education and Learning
63(2)
Language and Learning
65(4)
Gender and Learning
69(2)
The Education Crisis Is a Learning Crisis
71(8)
PART II Learning
79(62)
4 Learning in Early Childhood
81(19)
Illa: Early Learning in Peru
81(1)
Early Child Development Programs
82(2)
Cultural Differences in Child Rearing
84(2)
Methods for Studying Early Childhood
86(3)
Intergenerational Learning and the Home-School Transition
89(1)
Interventions in Early Childhood
90(3)
New Directions in Early Childhood Policy
93(2)
Preparing for the Future
95(5)
5 Children and Basic Skills
100(22)
Assiatou: Aspiring to Read in Guinea
100(1)
Learning the Basics
101(3)
Early Grade Reading
104(1)
Language of Instruction
105(5)
Learning Environments and Resources
110(2)
Out-of-School Children
112(2)
Basic Skills Are the Foundation
114(8)
6 Youth and Adult Learning: Beyond the Classroom
122(19)
Zeynep and Azra: Women's Literacy in Turkey
122(2)
Literacy, Adult Education, and Empowerment
124(5)
Youth Education Programs
129(2)
Learning and Agriculture
131(1)
Learning and Health
132(1)
Learning and Employment
133(1)
21st Century Skills
134(1)
Building Support for Lifelong Learning
135(6)
PART III Educational Institutions
141(34)
7 Schools and Schooling
143(14)
Salah: Dreaming of City Life in Tunisia
143(1)
Schools as Institutions
144(2)
Hidden Costs of Schooling
146(1)
Private Schools
147(2)
Islamic Schooling: A Case Example
149(2)
Investing in Schools
151(2)
Schools Offer Learning Pathways
153(4)
8 Teachers and Pedagogies
157(18)
Rachel, Kebe, and Chinelo: Teacher Training in Nigeria
157(1)
The Role of Teachers in Society
158(1)
Teachers as Learners
159(2)
Teacher Motivation
161(1)
Investing in Teachers
162(2)
Pedagogies
164(2)
Appropriate Curricula
166(2)
Instructional Time on Task
168(2)
Teaching for Learning
170(5)
PART IV Trends and Challenges
175(90)
9 New Technologies: Problems and Prospects
177(26)
Vijay: Playing Computer Games in Mumbai
177(1)
The Growth of ICTs in Developing Countries
178(2)
ICTs, Learning, and Education
180(3)
An ICT4E Conceptual Framework
183(6)
ICTs for End User Groups
189(4)
Digital Dilemmas in the Road Ahead
193(3)
New Opps for New Apps
196(7)
10 Globalization and the Environment
203(14)
Matheus: Environmental Change and Migration in Brazil
203(1)
Globalization
204(1)
Population Growth and Urbanization
205(2)
Migration and Civil Conflict
207(3)
The Environmental Imperative
210(3)
Growth Is Not the Answer
213(4)
11 Measurement of Learning
217(32)
Teboho and Mpho: Measuring Learning in Limpopo
217(2)
Research and Credibility
219(4)
Research Designs
223(2)
Learning Assessments
225(6)
Sampling
231(3)
Comparability
234(1)
The Bottom of the Pyramid
235(4)
Gathering Evidence: Three Principles
239(2)
Accountability
241(1)
Implementation Science
241(1)
Measurement for Learning
242(7)
12 Learning Equity: A New Agenda for Development
249(16)
Balandur: Village Inequality in Northern India
249(1)
The Search for a Global Learning Metric
250(1)
Closing the Gap
251(4)
Raising the Floor
255(3)
Toward a Learning Equity Agenda
258(3)
Learning as Development
261(4)
Epilogue: The Challenges Ahead
265(3)
Assiatou's Second Chance
265(1)
Geography Is Not (Necessarily) Destiny
266(1)
The Challenges Ahead
267(1)
References 268(46)
Index 314
Daniel A. Wagner (Ph.D. University of Michigan) is the UNESCO Chair in Learning and Literacy, and Professor of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. He is Founding Director of the International Literacy Institute and Director of Penns International Educational Development Program. A former Peace Corps Volunteer and Fulbright Scholar, he has served as an advisor to UNESCO, UNICEF, World Bank, USAID, DFID and other agencies, governments, and civil society organizations. He was elected Fellow of the American Educational Research Association and was the recipient of the 2014 UNESCO Confucius International Literacy Prize. He is the author or editor of more than 25 books and many other publications. See www.danwagner.org.