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This book examines a range of practical developments that are
happening in education as conducted in urban settings across
different scales. It contains insights that draw upon the fields of
urban planning/urbanism, geography, architecture, education and
pedagogy. It brings together current thinking and practical
experience from German and international perspectives. This
discussion is organised in four segments: schools and the
neighbourhood; education and the neighbourhood; education and the
city and finally, education and the region. Contributors cover a
wide range of contemporary and significant socio-political aspects
of education over the last decade. They reinforce emergent thinking
that space and its urban context are important dimensions of
education. This book also underscores the need for more research in
the relationships between education and urban development itself.
Current urban planning does not fully connect our understanding in
education with what we know in the spatial and planning sciences.
Accordingly, this release is an early attempt to bring together a
growing body of integrated and interdisciplinary reflection on
education theory and practice.
Young people imagine, perceive, experience, talk about, use, and
produce space in a wide variety of ways. In doing so, they acquire
and produce stocks of spatial knowledge. A quite dynamic and
ever-changing process by nature, young peopleās production and
acquisition of spatial knowledge are susceptible to many kinds of
conditionsāfrom those that shape their everyday routines to those
that constitute historical turning points. Against this backdrop
and drawing on a qualitative meta-analysis, the authors set out to
discover what changes the spatial knowledge of young people has
undergone during the past five decades. To that end, sixty
published studies were sampled, analysed and synthesized to offer a
āmeta-interpretationā in terms of both the evolution of young
peopleās spatial knowledge and the refiguration of spaces. As
such, the book will appeal to scholars conducting spatial research
on childhood and youth as well as scholars interested in urban
studies from diverse disciplines such as sociology, anthropology,
geography, architecture, urban planning and design. The Open Access
version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com,
has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non
Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license. The Open Access fee was
funded by Technische UniversitƤt Berlin
The Open Access version of this book, available at
http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003036159, has been made
available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No
Derivatives 4.0 license. This book examines a variety of subjective
spatial experiences and knowledge production practices in order to
shed new light on the specifics of contemporary socio-spatial
change, driven as it is by inter alia, digitalization,
transnationalization, and migration. Considering the ways in which
emerging spatial phenomena are conditioned by an increasing
interconnectedness, this book asks how spaces are changing as a
result of mediatization, increased mobility, globalization, and
social dislocation. With attention to questions surrounding the
negotiation and (visual) communication of space, it explores the
arrangements, spatialities, and materialities that underpin the
processes of spatial refiguration by which these changes come
about. Bringing together the work of leading scholars from across
diverse range disciplines to address questions of socio-spatial
transformation, this volume will appeal to sociologists and
geographers, as well as scholars and practitioners of urban
planning and architecture.
The Open Access version of this book, available at
http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003036159, has been made
available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No
Derivatives 4.0 license. This book examines a variety of subjective
spatial experiences and knowledge production practices in order to
shed new light on the specifics of contemporary socio-spatial
change, driven as it is by inter alia, digitalization,
transnationalization, and migration. Considering the ways in which
emerging spatial phenomena are conditioned by an increasing
interconnectedness, this book asks how spaces are changing as a
result of mediatization, increased mobility, globalization, and
social dislocation. With attention to questions surrounding the
negotiation and (visual) communication of space, it explores the
arrangements, spatialities, and materialities that underpin the
processes of spatial refiguration by which these changes come
about. Bringing together the work of leading scholars from across
diverse range disciplines to address questions of socio-spatial
transformation, this volume will appeal to sociologists and
geographers, as well as scholars and practitioners of urban
planning and architecture.
This book examines a range of practical developments that are
happening in education as conducted in urban settings across
different scales. It contains insights that draw upon the fields of
urban planning/urbanism, geography, architecture, education and
pedagogy. It brings together current thinking and practical
experience from German and international perspectives. This
discussion is organised in four segments: schools and the
neighbourhood; education and the neighbourhood; education and the
city and finally, education and the region. Contributors cover a
wide range of contemporary and significant socio-political aspects
of education over the last decade. They reinforce emergent thinking
that space and its urban context are important dimensions of
education. This book also underscores the need for more research in
the relationships between education and urban development itself.
Current urban planning does not fully connect our understanding in
education with what we know in the spatial and planning sciences.
Accordingly, this release is an early attempt to bring together a
growing body of integrated and interdisciplinary reflection on
education theory and practice.
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Urban Design Methods (Hardcover)
Undine Giseke, Martina Loew, Angela Million, Philipp Misselwitz, Joerg Stollmann
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R756
R710
Discovery Miles 7 100
Save R46 (6%)
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Urban Design Methods is a manual for reconciling contemporary
approaches with increasingly complex demands in the shaping of
urban living spaces. Architects and landscape architects, as well
as city, regional, and landscape planners, often find that they are
unable to do modern projects justice with their specialist skills
alone. Cooperative approaches are needed to deal with both the
complexity of raising questions and the growing number of affected
parties who need to be involved. Urban design - understood as an
inter- and transdisciplinary field at the interface of
architecture, city and regional planning, landscape architecture,
sociology, and the diverse stakeholders involved in any project -
requires a compendium of adaptable methods to dissolve the
boundaries between theory and praxis and between natural and social
systems. For the first time, this book collects a broad spectrum of
methods intended to support urban designers in deciphering the
contexts in which they work, and help them attain a greater
individual professional understanding. It clearly outlines the
range of challenges and the constantly evolving areas of activity.
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