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Technology and Workplace Skills for the Twenty-First Century
examines many of the rapid changes taking place at the intersection
of workplace demands and higher education throughout the Asia
Pacific region. The globalized, interdependent twenty-first century
workforce is built around computing, communication, and automation.
These characteristics have changed the ways in which higher
education is connected to the workforce and raised the stakes for
educating students for the changing workforce. In this book,
scholars and education leaders throughout Asia Pacific and the US
investigate how the changing needs of the workforce have shaped
higher education's curriculum, methods, and orientation, and show
how different Asia Pacific countries have responded differently to
these challenges.
This volume examines the changes taking place within graduate
education in the Asia Pacific Region. A collection of essays by
distinguished scholars from eight Asia Pacific nations links
profound changes occurring in the economies and societies of the
region to the many changes taking place within higher education.
Focusing on how the dynamics of a changing global economy are
affecting the ways higher education institutions are responding,
particular changes are seen to be taking place in graduate
education as many societies experience the need to produce
graduates of high quality with elevated qualifications. Such
changes are not without challenge or difficulty as issues of
finance. Questions of appropriate directions of innovation and
overall higher education capacity continue to frame the broader
issue of the changing nature of graduate education.
The nature of higher education is by no means fixed: it has
evolved over time; different models of higher education co-exist
alongside each other at present; and, worldwide, there are demands
for higher education to change to better help support economic
growth and to better fit chagning social and economic
circumstances. This book examines, from an Asian perspective, the
debates about how higher education should change. It considers
questions of funding, and of who will attend universities, and the
fundamental question of what universities are for, especially as
the three key funcations of universities - knowledge creation
through research, knowledge dissemination through teaching and
service, and knowledge conservation through libraries, the
disciplinary structuring of knowledge and in other ways - are
increasingly being carried out much more widely outside
universities in the new "knowledge society." Throughout, the book
discusses the extent to which the countries of East Asia are
developing new models of higher education, thereby better preparing
themselves for the "new "knowledge society," rather than simply
following old Western models.
This edited volume addresses the dynamic global contexts redefining
Asia Pacific higher education, including cross-border education,
capacity and national birthrate profiles, pressures created within
ranking/status systems, and complex shifts in the meanings of the
public good that influence public education in an increasingly
privatized world.
The past two decades have witnessed a vast expansion of higher
education in the Asia Pacific with education universally accepted
as a necessary condition of economic growth. Countries throughout
the region have rapidly expanded access to higher education, often
by loosening restrictions on the private sector to stimulate its
provision. In the process, the status of higher education has
shifted from a widely accepted public good to a commodity provided
and purchased through market mechanisms. Expansion and
privatization have created new concerns over the quality of
education throughout the region. The essays in this volume
underscore the fundamental interrelationships between quality,
educational expansion, and the pervasive challenges of
privatization.
This book establishes gender issues as a major focus within
developments shaping higher education in the Asia Pacific region.
The discussion is framed as a response to various dedicated
efforts, such as that of the United Nations, to foreground gender
as a site for political discourse throughout the region. Throughout
the volume, authors confront issues that continue to gain
prominence in higher education as a policy arena, including the
degree to which higher education operates within a framework of
gender equity and how higher education appointments-even
promotions-are sensitive to gender. By touching specific instances
throughout Korea, Japan, China, Australia, India, Malaysia,
Thailand, and Taiwan, authors offer an unprecedented big-picture
view of gender-relevant policy issues.
This book examines several emerging trends in higher education,
including artificial intelligence and the impact the COVID-19
pandemic has had on higher education transformation over the past
couple of years. All higher education leaders and policy makers are
dealing with the aftermath and continuing battle they face
regarding higher education within the context of COVID-19. AI and
the 4IR are also areas that impact every aspect of higher
education, especially as disciplines are forced to provide
credentials and relevance aligned to the workforce and economic
needs. The chapters provide regional and country case studies from
within the Asia Pacific Region.
This edited volume brings together exciting new research and ideas
related to the ongoing internationalization of higher education,
particularly in the Asia Pacific region, where this phenomenon has
been rapidly developing in recent years. It also specifically
focuses on analyzing the extent to which resurgent nationalisms
from around the world effect the growth and direction of this
sector of education. As cultural and political tensions rise
globally, many are turning to educators and education researchers
for suggestions on how to respond to this trend. This volume seeks
to answer that call. Moreover, as authors share perspectives and
data from a wide range of national and institutional contexts, the
applicability of this volume extends beyond national or regional
boundaries, offering questions, challenges, and lessons for
educators worldwide.
This volume examines the sustainability of higher education
massification throughout the Asia Pacific region. The massification
of higher education has swept across the region over the past three
decades in complex and astounding ways in some cases. The book
inquires after the many faces that higher education massification
is taking in varied country settings and seeks to identify the more
important implications that follow. It discusses massification and
its sustainability within the region's complex contexts and
addresses the issues of implications, challenges, and limitations.
Paying particular attention to implications on resources,
employment and social mobility, institutional identity, programs,
funding and teacher education, the book explores the capacity of
countries to stay on the course they have chosen and the
implications this may have for the continued identification of
resources to do so, the choice to focus more particularly and
importantly on the considerable range of innovations and variations
and the ability to recognize and develop them in meaningful ways.
This volume examines the sustainability of higher education
massification throughout the Asia Pacific region. The massification
of higher education has swept across the region over the past three
decades in complex and astounding ways in some cases. The book
inquires after the many faces that higher education massification
is taking in varied country settings and seeks to identify the more
important implications that follow. It discusses massification and
its sustainability within the region's complex contexts and
addresses the issues of implications, challenges, and limitations.
Paying particular attention to implications on resources,
employment and social mobility, institutional identity, programs,
funding and teacher education, the book explores the capacity of
countries to stay on the course they have chosen and the
implications this may have for the continued identification of
resources to do so, the choice to focus more particularly and
importantly on the considerable range of innovations and variations
and the ability to recognize and develop them in meaningful ways.
The nature of higher education is by no means fixed: it has evolved
over time; different models of higher education co-exist alongside
each other at present; and, worldwide, there are demands for higher
education to change to better help support economic growth and to
better fit chagning social and economic circumstances. This book
examines, from an Asian perspective, the debates about how higher
education should change. It considers questions of funding, and of
who will attend universities, and the fundamental question of what
universities are for, especially as the three key funcations of
universities - knowledge creation through research, knowledge
dissemination through teaching and service, and knowledge
conservation through libraries, the disciplinary structuring of
knowledge and in other ways - are increasingly being carried out
much more widely outside universities in the new "knowledge
society". Throughout, the book discusses the extent to which the
countries of East Asia are developing new models of higher
education, thereby better preparing themselves for the "new
"knowledge society", rather than simply following old Western
models.
This edited volume examines the importance of quality issues in
contemporary higher education systems in the Asia Pacific. Part One
foregrounds relevant discussions of 'quality' within today's
globalized, interconnected, and complex higher education systems
while Part Two focuses on selected universities in the Asia Pacific
region. Chapter contributors discuss how quality issues and quality
assurance mechanisms are implemented in their situation-specific
systems. Part Three extends the research of higher education
quality assurance in Hawaii Pacific University (HPU) and the
diverse international student body in the Australian higher
education system. The conclusion chapter discusses a typology of
methods used by higher education systems in establishing effective
quality assurance mechanisms.
This edited volume brings together exciting new research and ideas
related to the ongoing internationalization of higher education,
particularly in the Asia Pacific region, where this phenomenon has
been rapidly developing in recent years. It also specifically
focuses on analyzing the extent to which resurgent nationalisms
from around the world effect the growth and direction of this
sector of education. As cultural and political tensions rise
globally, many are turning to educators and education researchers
for suggestions on how to respond to this trend. This volume seeks
to answer that call. Moreover, as authors share perspectives and
data from a wide range of national and institutional contexts, the
applicability of this volume extends beyond national or regional
boundaries, offering questions, challenges, and lessons for
educators worldwide.
This volume explores the implications of student mobility on higher
education across the Asia Pacific Region. Student Mobility has
become a major feature of higher education throughout the world,
and most particularly over the past two decades within the Asia
Pacific Region. This system of mobility is entering a period of
profound predicted change, created by the social and economic
transformations being occasioned by the rapid increased uses of
artificial intelligence (AI), a process that is being increasingly
framed as the "Fourth Industrial Revolution" or Work 4.0, a process
that is widely predicted to evoke fundamental changes in the ways
that work is performed and who does it. This volume explores
various dimensions of this process, examining various aspects of
the process as they are affecting national and regional economies
even as the phenomenon produces a wide variety of engagements with
the global economy as a whole.
Das historische Buch k nnen zahlreiche Rechtschreibfehler, fehlende
Texte, Bilder, oder einen Index. K ufer k nnen eine kostenlose
gescannte Kopie des Originals (ohne Tippfehler) durch den Verlag.
1891. Nicht dargestellt. Auszug: ... (in St ck Geschichte der b
hmisch-pf lzisch-d nischen Periode des 30j hrigen Arieges ist es,
das uns hier besch ftigt, eine Episode des nieders chsisch-d
nischen Arieges. Nachdem es dem Aaiser Ferdinand II. und der Liga
im Jahre 1U22 gelungen war, durch Tilly und 5pinola die f r den
Vfalzgrafen Friedrich, A nig von V hmen, aufgetretenen Feldherrn
aus der Pfalz zu vertreiben, war durch den R ckzug des Grafen Ernst
von Nansfeld und des Vischofs Christian von tzalberstadt der
Ariegsschauplatz allm hlich nach Nordwestdeutschland verlegt
worden. Als dann auch nach der Vesiegung des Letzteren bei
Stadtlohn i, n August 027, Tilly in niederrheinisch-westf lischen
Areise stehen blieb, und die Vl ne der Katholiken, die
Gegenreformation auch in Norddcutschland durchzuf hren, immer
deutlicher hervortraten, sahen sich zun chst die F rsten und St nde
des nieders chsischen Areises durch Tilly be droht; wurden doch
schon einzelne Amter dieses Areises von ligistischen und spanischen
Truppen besetzt. Nachdem sich darauf unter best ndigen
Verhandlungen und stetem Zaudern im Laufe des Wahres b2q. die Verh
ltnisse immer mehr zugespitzt hatten, ermannte sich endlich im Fr
hjahr 625 der gr ere Teil der F rsten des nieders chsischen
Kreises, w hlte auf dem F rstentage l zu Lauenburg Ende M rz und
Anfang April den A nig Christian IV, von D nemark, der als Herzog
von Holstein Mitglied des Areises war, zum Areisobersten und
beschlossen sich zu r sten. Bei der Stellung des A nigs zum Aaiser
kamen diese Beschl sse einer Ariegserkl rung gleich. Nachdem Tilly
das an der Grenze des...
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