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This book examines policies and practices that relate to the
education of female entrepreneurs in China, India, Singapore,
Indonesia, and Japan. Through both textual and interview data, the
book reveals the importance of initiatives that structure
entrepreneurships for women, and informal learning through networks
in a variety of settings which promotes their understandings of
business. Part I offers an overview of the formal and informal
sectors of the economy and the international development plans
related to each. Part II proffers national development plans and
business policies related to female entrepreneurship in each of the
five countries. Part III provides stakeholders' perspectives of
entrepreneurial learning in each country. Part IV presents
conceptual and theoretical models which offer a visual
representation of entrepreneurs' learning process. Finally, Part V
grapples with the inclusion of informal learning and networking
experiences for female entrepreneurs.
Daughters of the Tharu identifies and examines the cultural conditions and circumstances that influence the process of educational decision making for girls in Nepal, recognizing and studying the significant, yet often forgotten, voices of women. Situating women's lives within the context of their families, neighborhoods, region and country. Maslak explores the cultural and sociopolitical conditions that shape, mold and dictate individual agency, conditions that determine the educational choices women make for their daughters. This book seeks to go beyond the existing educational participation literature by exploring how ethnic identity, ethnic interaction, religious beliefs, and religious rituals function as interweaving sociocultural forces in the community and how familial relations in the home are influenced by the power structures that subsume gender roles. By examining the process of educational participation with special reference to ethnic and religious culture and linking macro-structural perimeters and micro-individual agency of attitudes and beliefs, this book paints a much broader and more nuanced picture of the varied forces that govern and influence girls' participation in school.
Teaching Writing for All: Process, Genres, and Activities offers
educators an informative anthology about writing instruction in the
K-12 school setting. The collection provides articles, discussion
questions, and activities to deepen educators' understanding of the
writing process, genres of writing, and the uses of writing. The
text begins with articles that explore the evolution of writing
instruction and effective practices which can help educators teach
the process of writing to students. The proceeding sections provide
readings on the various genres of writing which are typically used
in K-12 classrooms, including narrative, poetry, expository, and
persuasive writing. The book also addresses writing for the English
language learner and students with learning disabilities. The
anthology leads the reader into writing in a technological world by
closing with an article about facilitating online writing through
the practice of journaling. Teaching Writing for All is a valuable
resource which provides students of the education profession with a
collection of articles that offers information on history and genre
writing for students in elementary, middle, and high school
settings. It is well suited for courses in education, especially
those with an emphasis on writing instruction.
This book examines the ways in which formal and non-formal
education can contribute to women's successful design, development
and operation of small businesses in rural settings. Calling on
varied, pertinent social theories, the book examines profitable
businesses operated by Dongxiang Muslim women in the southern Gansu
province of northwestern China. The author explains the
multifaceted formula for women's challenges and successes in their
business endeavours and goal for financial security. It argues that
informal learning is the most important type of education to employ
knowledge and skills to earn a living in general, and design and
operate small businesses by women in rural areas in particular. The
book concludes with an original, timely and necessary model for
education that could be utilized by the women in this work; one
that positions informal education as the primary conduit for
successful entrepreneurial work and combines elements of both
formal and non-formal educational principles and practices, thus
offering support for the successful operation of women's
businesses.
This book examines the ways in which formal and non-formal
education can contribute to women's successful design, development
and operation of small businesses in rural settings. Calling on
varied, pertinent social theories, the book examines profitable
businesses operated by Dongxiang Muslim women in the southern Gansu
province of northwestern China. The author explains the
multifaceted formula for women's challenges and successes in their
business endeavours and goal for financial security. It argues that
informal learning is the most important type of education to employ
knowledge and skills to earn a living in general, and design and
operate small businesses by women in rural areas in particular. The
book concludes with an original, timely and necessary model for
education that could be utilized by the women in this work; one
that positions informal education as the primary conduit for
successful entrepreneurial work and combines elements of both
formal and non-formal educational principles and practices, thus
offering support for the successful operation of women's
businesses.
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Paperback
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R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
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