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Covers all 22 units of the specification giving learners everything
they need to know in one textbook, and allowing tutors to tailor
the course around their learners' needs and interests. Achieve your
potential: Assessment activities and grading tips throughout each
unit gives students all the practice they need to achieve the best
possible grade, explaining clearly what learners need to do to
achieve Pass, Merit and Distinction. Put yourself in the
professional's shoes: WorkSpace case studies take your learners
into the real world of work, showing them how they can apply their
knowledge in a real-life context. Advice from former students on
how current learners can make their BTEC experience a stepping
stone to success. Edexcel Assignment tips: Written and verified by
experts in the BTEC team, there's invaluable unit-by-unit advice on
how learners can get the most from their BTEC course.
Equity, Opportunity and Education in Postcolonial Southeast Asia
addresses the ways in which colonial histories, nationalist
impulses and forces of globalization shape equity and access to
education in Southeast Asia. Although increasingly identified as a
regional grouping (ASEAN), Malaysia, Indonesia, Burma, Thailand,
Singapore and the Philippines are known for their vastly different
state structures, political regimes, political economies and
ethnocultural and religious demography. The expert contributors to
this volume investigate educational access and equity for citizens,
ethnic and religious minorities, and indigenous people within these
countries. The subject of education is framed within the broader
national and local challenges of achieving equity and social
justice. This book examines the dimensions of (post)colonialism,
nationalism, and globalisation as played out within different
international educational contexts. Chapters include: Understanding
the Cultural Politics of Southeast Asian Education through
Postcolonial Theory Downplaying Difference: Representations of
Diversity in Contemporary Burmese Schools and Educational Equity
Learner Centered Pedagogy in Post-Conflict Timor-Leste: For the
Benefit of the Learner or the Learned Technology of Dominance,
Technology of Liberation: Education in Colonial and Postcolonial
Cambodia Change and Continuity in the History of Vietnamese Higher
Education Colonization by Stealth: The Case of Thailand Education
Politics in Postcolonial Malaysia: Ethnicity, Difference and
Inequalities The Singapore Education Journey: From Colonialism to
Globalism
Equity, Opportunity and Education in Postcolonial Southeast Asia
addresses the ways in which colonial histories, nationalist
impulses and forces of globalization shape equity and access to
education in Southeast Asia. Although increasingly identified as a
regional grouping (ASEAN), Malaysia, Indonesia, Burma, Thailand,
Singapore and the Philippines are known for their vastly different
state structures, political regimes, political economies and
ethnocultural and religious demography. The expert contributors to
this volume investigate educational access and equity for citizens,
ethnic and religious minorities, and indigenous people within these
countries. The subject of education is framed within the broader
national and local challenges of achieving equity and social
justice. This book examines the dimensions of (post)colonialism,
nationalism, and globalisation as played out within different
international educational contexts. Chapters include: Understanding
the Cultural Politics of Southeast Asian Education through
Postcolonial Theory Downplaying Difference: Representations of
Diversity in Contemporary Burmese Schools and Educational Equity
Learner Centered Pedagogy in Post-Conflict Timor-Leste: For the
Benefit of the Learner or the Learned Technology of Dominance,
Technology of Liberation: Education in Colonial and Postcolonial
Cambodia Change and Continuity in the History of Vietnamese Higher
Education Colonization by Stealth: The Case of Thailand Education
Politics in Postcolonial Malaysia: Ethnicity, Difference and
Inequalities The Singapore Education Journey: From Colonialism to
Globalism
Reconciliation is one of the most significant contemporary
challenges in the world today. In this innovative new volume,
educational academics and practitioners across a range of cultural
and political contexts examine the links between reconciliation and
critical pedagogy, putting forward the notion that reconciliation
projects should be regarded as public pedagogical interventions,
with much to offer to wider theories of learning. While ideas about
reconciliation are proliferating, few scholarly accounts have
focused on its pedagogies. This book seeks to develop a generative
theory that properly maps reconciliation processes and works out
the pedagogical dimensions of new modes of narrating and listening,
and effecting social change. The contributors build conceptual
bridges between the scholarship of reconciliation studies and
existing education and pedagogical literature, bringing together
the concepts of reconciliation and pedagogy into a dialogical
encounter and evaluating how each might be of mutual benefit to the
other, theoretically and practically. This study covers a broad
range of territory including ethnographic accounts of
reconciliation efforts, practical implications of reconciliation
matters for curricula and pedagogy in schools and universities and
theoretical and philosophical considerations of
reconciliation/pedagogy. It will be of great interest to students
and scholars of peace and reconciliation studies, educational
studies and international relations.
Reconciliation is one of the most significant contemporary
challenges in the world today. In this innovative new volume,
educational academics and practitioners across a range of cultural
and political contexts examine the links between reconciliation and
critical pedagogy, putting forward the notion that reconciliation
projects should be regarded as public pedagogical interventions,
with much to offer to wider theories of learning. While ideas about
reconciliation are proliferating, few scholarly accounts have
focused on its pedagogies. This book seeks to develop a generative
theory that properly maps reconciliation processes and works out
the pedagogical dimensions of new modes of narrating and listening,
and effecting social change. The contributors build conceptual
bridges between the scholarship of reconciliation studies and
existing education and pedagogical literature, bringing together
the concepts of reconciliation and pedagogy into a dialogical
encounter and evaluating how each might be of mutual benefit to the
other, theoretically and practically. This study covers a broad
range of territory including ethnographic accounts of
reconciliation efforts, practical implications of reconciliation
matters for curricula and pedagogy in schools and universities and
theoretical and philosophical considerations of
reconciliation/pedagogy. It will be of great interest to students
and scholars of peace and reconciliation studies, educational
studies and international relations.
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