|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book draws on detailed case studies from three very different
countries and school systems to explore the early adolescent
learner and the middle years of learning, both of which are often
overlooked in the literature. An abundance of research shows the
importance of the middle years in putting early adolescent learners
on the path to success in further education, careers, and general
wellbeing. By focusing on bringing current research to life through
the sharing of practical examples and lived experiences of
practitioners, this book explores how issues such as curriculum
reform, inclusive philosophies, instructional design, and
assessment practices are supporting the conditions in which
effective middle years learning can unfold. A comparative approach,
using data from Canada, Germany and Finland, is utilized to
critically examine the effects of the pedagogical methods employed
by teachers, and the learning environments in which formal
education takes place. The book makes a compelling case for the
importance of fostering student voice and choice, and developing
new ways of engaging the school community as a whole, and makes a
valuable contribution to the discourse concerning early adolescent
learners and the middle years of schooling.
This book draws on detailed case studies from three very different
countries and school systems to explore the early adolescent
learner and the middle years of learning, both of which are often
overlooked in the literature. An abundance of research shows the
importance of the middle years in putting early adolescent learners
on the path to success in further education, careers, and general
wellbeing. By focusing on bringing current research to life through
the sharing of practical examples and lived experiences of
practitioners, this book explores how issues such as curriculum
reform, inclusive philosophies, instructional design, and
assessment practices are supporting the conditions in which
effective middle years learning can unfold. A comparative approach,
using data from Canada, Germany and Finland, is utilized to
critically examine the effects of the pedagogical methods employed
by teachers, and the learning environments in which formal
education takes place. The book makes a compelling case for the
importance of fostering student voice and choice, and developing
new ways of engaging the school community as a whole, and makes a
valuable contribution to the discourse concerning early adolescent
learners and the middle years of schooling.
The work examines the foundation and development of Liberal Arts
Colleges in the Bombay Presidency/Western India during the 19th
century. It describes the transplantation of administrative
structures, conceptions of a liberal education and a syllabus from
the British metropolitan area to colonial Western India. Based on
the analysis of historical sources the study tries to understand
the broader impact of British higher education on social and
political change in Western India. The Liberal Arts Colleges within
the University of Bombay are described as new arenas for social
interaction producing a number of outspoken and self-confident
graduates openly challenging the primacy of colonial rule in the
early 20th century.
|
|