This latest volume in the World Yearbook of Education Series considers changing space-times of education by asking how they become unevenly textured as our worlds globalise, horizons shift and familiar points of reference melt and are remade. Acknowledging the reach of economic and cultural change, digital communication, geopolitics and persistent inequalities, the chapters trace processes that are re-making education and societies. Examining the depth of their impact on practices, methods and concepts reveals the significance of knowledge-building and socially embedded forms of reasoning in emerging patterns of educational governance, pedagogic and policy reforms as well as in lived understandings of self and social worlds.The organisation of the collection into three sections – Making Spaces, Troubling Temporalities, and Mobility and Contexts – begins to map out an ambitious project. It calls on education researchers and professionals to write the present as history by grasping the socio-spatial, historical and political dimensions and effects that frame, form and filter the educational present. This research calls for a revitalised historical sociology and novel forms of comparative education that can provide productive insights, inform creative problem solving and suggest practical directions for education. This agenda recognises: the unevenness of educational space-timesthe making of education as a social institutionthe persistence and effects of social embeddedness, eventful space, situated knowledge, and geosocial thinkingthe present as history and multiple temporalities in educationdifferent registers of transformation that become visible through lenses such as identity, work, citizenship and mobility.The World Yearbook of Education 2018 continues the project of compiling worldwide research on globalising education. These volumes offer a powerful commentary on how and why space-times of education are changing and emphasise the importance of forms of knowledge that materialise categories of professionals, policies and practices. This volume will be of interest to academics, professionals and policymakers in education and social policy, and also to scholars who engage in historical studies of education and debates about the socio-material formations that contribute to educational inequalities and dynamics of difference.
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This latest volume in the World Yearbook of Education Series considers the transformations in contemporary education that accompany global shifting horizons, changes to human self-understanding and practices of governing, and which open the door to educational reform.
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Chapter 1: Reclaiming Comparative Historical Sociologies of Education Chapter 2: The Warp and Weft of Comparative Education Section 1: Making Spaces Chapter 3: Training Female Ways of Knowing or Educating (In) a Common Sense Chapter 4: Europeanizing through Expertise Chapter 5: A Global-Local Mixture of Educational Reform Policy in Taiwan Chapter 6: Producing the Institutional Timescape Chapter 7: Spaces-time of Innovation Section 2: Troubling Temporalities Chapter 8: Digital Classrooms and the Reconfiguration of the Space-Times of Education Chapter 9: The Affective-Discursive Orthodoxies of the "I don’t forget" Education Policy in Cyprus Chapter 10: Animating Animus Chapter 11: Modernity, Identity, and Citizenship Section 3: Mobility and Contexts Chapter 12: Context, Entanglement and Assemblage as Matters of Concern in Comparative Education Research Chapter 13: Governing (Im)mobile Academics in Global Times Chapter 14: History Education, Identity Formation and International Relations Chapter 15: Towards a Mobile Sociology of Education
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780367350048
Publisert
2019-07-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
508 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
276

Om bidragsyterne

Julie McLeod is Professor of Curriculum, Equity and Social Change in the Melbourne Graduate School of Education, University of Melbourne, Australia.

Noah W. Sobe is Professor of Cultural and Educational Studies at Loyola University Chicago, USA, where he also directs the Center for Comparative Education.

Terri Seddon is Professor of Education, La Trobe University, Australia.