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This edited book is a unique comprehensive discussion of
21st century skills in education in a comparative
perspective. It presents investigation on how eight very different
countries (China, Canada, England, Finland, Poland, South Korea,
the USA and Russia) have attempted to integrate key competences and
new literacies into their curricula and balance them with the
acquisition of disciplinary knowledge. Bringing together
psychological, sociological, pedagogical approaches, the book also
explores theoretical underpinnings of 21st century skills and
offers a scalable solution to align multiple competency and
literacy frameworks. Â The book provides a conceptual
framework for curriculum reform and transformation of school
practice designed to ensure that every school graduate thrives in
our technologically and culturally changing world. By providing
eight empirical portraits of competence-driven curriculum reform,
this book is great resource to educational researchers and policy
makers. Â
This is a study of higher education in the world's four largest
developing economies--Brazil, Russia, India, and China. Already
important players globally, by mid-century, they are likely to be
economic powerhouses. But whether they reach that level of
development will depend in part on how successfully they create
quality higher education that puts their labor forces at the
cutting edge of the information society.
Using an empirical, comparative approach, this book develops a
broad picture of the higher education system in each country in the
context of both global and local forces. The authors offer insights
into how differing socioeconomic and historic patterns of change
and political contexts influence developments in higher education.
In asking why each state takes the approach that it does, this work
situates a discussion of university expansion and quality in the
context of governments' educational policies and reflects on the
larger struggles over social goals and the distribution of national
resources.
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