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Books > Social sciences > Education > Higher & further education
Education is the foundation to almost all successful lives. It is
vital that learning opportunities are available on a global scale,
regardless of individual disabilities or differences, and to create
more inclusive educational practices. Disability and Equity in
Higher Education Accessibility is a comprehensive reference source
for the latest scholarly material on emerging methods and trends in
disseminating knowledge in higher education, despite traditional
hindrances. Featuring extensive coverage on relevant topics such as
higher education policies, electronic resources, and inclusion
barriers, this publication is ideally designed for educators,
academics, students, and researchers interested in expanding their
knowledge of disability-inclusive global education.
The role, scale and expectations of higher education institutions
have changed dramatically in recent times as knowledge-intensity
has become a key determinant of economic competitiveness. Higher
education institutions face increasing pressure to demonstrate
their fitness to meet the needs of society and individuals.
Questions about the quality, performance and productivity of higher
education are central to these concerns, of relevance to society,
governments and students. This Handbook brings together a group of
international scholars to address these issues and propose how to
move beyond them. This Handbook is the first comprehensive
reference, laying out current research in the field, and bringing
it up-to-date with cutting-edge theoretical and empirical
contributions from leading international experts. Blending new
research with richly contextualised national and regional examples,
the authors give authoritative insights from around the globe on
how best to understand, assess and improve quality, performance and
accountability in higher education. This Handbook will become an
invaluable tool for practitioners in higher education and education
policy-making as well as researchers and students of social science
and public policy. Contributors include: K.S. Adeyemo, K.
Aleksandriyskaya, A. Amaral, S. Archer, I. Austin, E. Bell, P.
Benneworth, C. Blanco, V. Borden, R. Bringle, R. Brown, H. Coates,
G. Croucher, D. Dill, M. Dobbins, D. Edwards, A. Fryar, S.
Fukahori, A. Gibson, F. Guo, M. Hanlon, L. Harvey, E. Hazelkorn, M.
Hicks, N. Hillman, A.Y.-c.Hou, F. Huang, J. Huisman, Y. Ibrahim, R.
Ismail, N. Jankowski, E. Jerez, G. Jones, B. Jongbloed, J.
Jungblut, P. Kelly, R. King, K. Kinser, M. Klemencic, G. Kuh, J.
Lane, L. Lange, M.C. Lennon, S.E. Lid, N.C. Liu, Y. Luo, M. Mahat,
J. Marino, M. Martin, W.F Massy, A.C. McCormick, K. Moore, S. Moyo,
P. Noonan, D. Orr, R. Shavelson, J. Shi, O.-J. Skodvin, B.
Stensaker, F. Strydom, P. Teixeira, R. Tijssen, O. Troitschanskaia,
A. Usher, F. van Vught, N.V. Varghese, H. Vossensteyn, M.
Vukasovic, R. Wagenaar, C.D. Wan, E. Weber, H.P. Weingarten, W.
Wen, D. Westerheijden, R. Williams, T. Yang, N. Zeeman, L. Zhang
This book documents strategies for universities engaging
sustainability challenges through the education of global citizens
on topics such as climate change, habitat alteration, species loss,
resource depletion and contamination, food access and sovereignty,
economic equity, and energy use. Different disciplines and
operational units often have disparate ideas in mind when they work
toward advancing sustainability. For example, some disciplines
focus on environmental challenges (identifying impacts to
ecosystems, mitigation and remediation strategies), some on
greening of industrial and commercial practices while others
address social equity-often there is little effort to connect these
pieces especially while considering economic impacts. This book
examines how Florida Gulf Coast University has attempted to infuse
sustainability across curricula and operations as an integrated
concept and our successes and shortcomings are instructional for
sustainability practitioners on college campuses and other
industries in a wide audience.
Pedagogy and andragogy are often treated as separate fields,
despite their similarities and shared goal of stimulating learning
in individuals to the fullest degree possible. Pedagogical and
Andragogical Teaching and Learning with Information Communication
Technologies displays that teachers can further their art by
considering both pedagogy and andragogy in light of the each other,
specifically in the modern classroom. Information Communication
Technologies are ubiquitous in today's learning institutions and
this book provides an important platform for the furthering of the
modern instructional paradigm. To truly advance into future
possibilities opened by technology, teachers are required to allow
for learning without the constraints of traditional attitudes
toward time, space, age and experience. This book shows how to
blend and learn from the revolution taking place in educational
institutions across the world.
The volume was developed to address conceptual, relational and
formational questions around the phenomena of creativity and
spirituality from a multidisciplinary perspective. We acknowledge
the complexity of each phenomenon, and the need for multiple
perspectives, in a number of ways. First, different chapters are
written from psychological, theological or philosophical
perspectives. Second, multiple research perspectives are considered
across empirical and phenomenological methods of inquiry. Finally,
multiple associations between creativity and spirituality are
evaluated. From such multiple perspectives the theme of this volume
emerges. Both creativity and spirituality are important for
individual and societal flourishing but we know little about
fostering both in the 21st century. Some ways of fostering them are
psychologically harmful and need to be avoided. New ways of
protecting people as they engage in creative and spiritual
endeavours are needed. In particular, formal training in both
creativity and spirituality within the sphere of higher education
should be developed in the light of current research. However, new
research that integrates multiple perspectives and examines
creativity and spirituality together is needed for training that
avoids harm and promotes individual and social flourishing. The
book will be valuable for educators in all disciplines of higher
education because it justifies and explicates training in
creativity and spirituality within all areas of higher education.
Further, it discusses how such training might best be included
within andragogical practice. The book will be useful for
researchers of creativity and spirituality because it gives an
overview of contemporary research issues and findings, and proposes
a new philosophical? theological perspective for integrative
research in these areas. Students in fields of creativity, theology
and spirituality will use the book as a synthesis of contemporary
theories and research relating to both creativity and spirituality
and for direction in post?graduate research. More broadly,
Christians and others who appreciate the creative and performing
arts will find much to challenge their thinking and deepen their
awareness of spirituality within human creativity.
This book is for anyone interested in how to build a teacher
education program utilizing the arts as one central modality for
teaching and learning or for those interested in building some of
their program along these lines. Throughout the book you will find
reference to the intersection of ethics, aesthetics, and teaching.
We provide an integrated program devoted to good learning and the
good society. In the book we discuss how the program came to be and
the underlying educational thinking that informs the whole program.
This section of the book is invaluable for understanding how the
reader can build her/ his own arts approach to teacher education.
The central section of the book is devoted to the specific
coursework of the program. Each author describes in detail how
she/he leverages aesthetics and art to expand the possibilities of
learning and teaching (including a chapter focused on the core
competency course, Teaching, Imagination, Creativity) in language
and literacy, psychology of education, science education,
mathematics education, social studies education, and classroom
management including many examples from our teaching. The book ends
with a focus group discussion about the program by former students.
Violence is rampant in America. It is ingrained in our history and
our psychology, but what cultural similarities do high-violence
areas share? It has been a question tackled by academics and
members of the law community since the foundation of our country;
and yet, are we any closer to an answer now than we were a hundred
years ago? If we are closer, why has the crime rate steadily
increased? Reason would conclude that in recognizing the cultural
similarities of high-violence areas, we would be able to alter
these similarities and deter criminal behaviors. Even so, the
behaviors are not deterred. Crime has not lessened. Studies
continue, but nothing changes. Should we therefore give up? Or
should our hypotheses and conclusions merely change? Author Hassan
Dibich says yes to the latter. "The Subculture of Violence" takes a
close look at the psychological and cultural hypotheses of old.
Dibich delves deeply into the science of homicide and how
socioeconomic and even climactic conditions affect statistics. He
looks closely at communities with a high number of newcomers and
single parents. He goes so far as to disprove previous logic and
call for fresh research. America is being swallowed by violence. It
is time for new answers, as the old brought us no closer to peace.
This book explores key aspects of the personal, educational and
professional characteristics of international faculty members,
their work roles and challenges they face in Asia and the Pacific,
compared to those from Europe and the United States. It focuses on
globalization of the academic profession and provides a more
comprehensive analysis of an overall portrait of international
faulty members at work in various higher education systems.
![Index; 1973 (Hardcover): University of Massachusetts at Amherst](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/2399097860925179215.jpg) |
Index; 1973
(Hardcover)
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
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With the ever-changing climate of education around the globe, it is
essential that educators stay abreast of the most updated teaching
methods and applications. To do this, fostering teacher education
programs that include innovative practices and initiatives within
the field is imperative. The Handbook of Research on Teacher
Education and Professional Development investigates current
initiatives and approaches in educational programs. Focusing on
research studies and theoretical concepts on innovative projects
related to teacher education and professional development programs,
this book is a pivotal reference source for academics,
professionals, students, practitioners, and researchers.
Professional development of educators is an complex process through
which teachers strive continuously for pedagogical improvement. In
that sense, professional growth benefits learners and teachers
while also promoting the quality of the schools, colleges, and
academic departments where it takes place. Innovative Professional
Development Methods and Strategies for STEM Education is an
authoritative publication featuring the latest scholarly research
on a wide range of professional advancement topics in STEM
education with special emphasis on content, process,
implementation, and impact, as well as on the implications for
teachers, educators, and administrators. Highlighting comprehensive
research across a broad scope of relevant issues including, but not
limited to, teacher training, development models, and the
implementation of leadership practices, this book is a seminal
reference source for STEM professionals working in schools,
colleges, and various science and mathematics departments at
secondary and post-secondary institutions.
Reappraising ideas associated with Ernst Bloch, Roland Barthes and
Gaston Bachelard within the context of a utopian pedagogy, Hope,
Utopia and Creativity in Higher Education reframes the
transformative, creative and collaborative potential of education
offering new concepts, tactics and pedagogical possibilities. Craig
A. Hammond explores ways of analysing and democratising not only
pedagogical conception, knowledge and delivery, but also the
learning experience, and processes of negotiation and
peer-assessment. Hammond shows how the incorporation of already
existent learner hopes, daydreams, and creative possibilities can
open up new opportunities for thinking about popular culture and
memory, learning and knowledge, and collaborative communities of
support. Drawing together theoretical and cultural material in a
teaching and learning environment of empowerment, Hammond
illustrates that formative articulations of alternative, utopian
futures, across sociological, humanities, and education studies
subjects and curricula, becomes possible.
This book focuses on critical issues and perspectives concerning
globally mobile students, aspects that have grown in importance
thanks to major geopolitical, economic, and technological changes
around the globe (i.e., in and across major origins and
destinations of international students). Over the past few decades,
the field of international higher education and scholarship has
developed robust areas of research that guide current policy,
programs, and pedagogy. However, many of the established narratives
and wisdoms that dominate research agendas, scope, and foci have
become somewhat ossified and are unable to reflect recent political
upheavals and other changes (e.g. the Brexit, Trump era, and Belt
and Road Initiative) that have disrupted a number of areas
including mobility patterns and recruitment practices,
understanding and supporting students, engagement of global mobile
students with their local counterparts, and the political economy
of international education at large. By re-assessing established
issues and perspectives in light of the emerging global/local
situations, the contributing authors - all experts on international
education - share insights on policies and practices that can help
adapt to emerging challenges and opportunities for institutions,
scholars, and other stakeholders in international higher education.
Including theoretical, empirical, and practitioner-based methods
and perspectives provided by scholars from around the world, the
book offers a unique and intriguing resource.
Written with level 3 readers firmly in mind, this book offers
concise, accessible, one-stop coverage of the Level 3 Award in
Education and Training, including the Learning and Development
units. It takes account of new policies and legislation, emerging
technologies and the current post-compulsory teaching and learning
climate. The text encourages reflection of practice throughout,
supported by case studies and activities aimed at consolidating and
contextualising the information. The content covers the full range
of relevant LSIS units, includes a detailed glossary plus chapters
on the micro-teach and writing essays and assignments, and is fully
mapped to the latest ETF Standards. Written by the successful team
who produced A Complete Guide to the Level 4 Certificate in
Education and Training and A Complete Guide to the Level 5 Diploma
in Education and Training.
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