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This book argues that the neoliberal globalisation of higher
education faces a need for recalibration. In light of increased
concerns from universities in cultivating globalisation, this
volume brings together a multi-ethnic and multilingual team of
researchers who argue that the continued development of
internationalized education now requires new research and
practices. As university leaders seek to build the best programs to
help students to go abroad, they can face a number of challenges -
risk management, negotiating with diverse partners, designing rich
experience-based learning and the hopes, fears and limitations of
the students themselves. Consequently, the authors argue that
changes are particularly important given the current US-centric and
UK-centric structural readjustments to globalization policies
across all fields of higher education and knowledge production.
This multi-perspectival edited collection will appeal to students
and scholars of global education, globalization and international
education.
This book presents innovative strategies for teaching the Chinese
language to English-speaking students around the world, using
in-depth research arising from a long-running and successful
Chinese language teaching programme in Sydney. Throughout the book
its authors emphasise the importance of teaching methods which
explore the relevance of Chinese to all aspects of students'
everyday lives; 'Localising Chinese' by folding it into students'
everyday sociolinguistic activities performed in English. The
research presented here demonstrates how, through school-driven,
research-oriented service-learning, university graduates from China
learnt to use student-centred learning-focused language education
as a basis for professional learning. In the context of China's
growing influence in the global academic community, this book
addresses the urgent need to promote effective communication and
partnerships. It provides a valuable resource for language teachers
and teacher educators, as well as education researchers in the
areas of international education, linguistics, the sociology of
education and knowledge exchange.
This book explores pedagogical concepts, metaphors and images of
non-white, non-western researchers and research students on the
inter/nationalization of education. Specifically, this book draws
on the intellectual resources of China and India to explore the
pedagogical dynamics and dimensions of the
localization/globalization of education with non-Western
characteristics. It introduces theoretic-linguistic non-Western
concepts from the Tamil, Sanskrit and Chinese languages for use in
Western, English-only education and redefines the intellectual
basis for internationalising education. Debating whether
'international education' is Western-centric in terms of its
privileging and promotion of Euro-American theoretical knowledge,
this book contends that the internationalisation of Western-centric
education can benefit from the intellectual power and powerfully
relevant theorising performed by non-Western international
students. It formulates a democratic vision for the
internationalisation of education, with the potential to create
transnational solidarity and constitute a forum for mobilising
debates about global knowledge and power structures. It also
provides key tools to use non-Western theoretic-linguistic tools
and modes of critique in research undertaken in Anglophone Western
universities.
This is the first book on "global teachers" and the increasingly
important phenomenon of 'brain circulation' in the global teaching
profession. A teaching qualification is a passport to an
international professional career: the global teacher is found in
more and more classrooms around the world today. It is a two-way
movement. This book looks at the growing importance of immigrant
teachers in western countries today and at teachers who exit from
western countries (emigrant teachers) seeking teaching experience
in other countries. Drawing on the international literature in
Europe, North America, Asiaand elsewhere supplemented by rich
insights derived from recent Australian research, the book outlines
the personal, institutional and structural processes nationally and
internationally underlying the increasing global circulation of
teachers. It identifies the key drivers of global teacher mobility:
a range of factors including family, lifestyle, classroom
experience, travel, opportunities for advancement, discipline,
linguistic skills, taxation rates, cultural factors and
institutional frameworks and policy support. The book is the first
detailed contemporary account of the experiences of Australian
immigrant and emigrant teachers in the schools and communities
where they teach and live. It makes an important and original
theoretical and empirical contribution to the contemporary fields
of sociology of education and immigration studies."
Maintaining English as the sole language of knowledge production
and dissemination in universities that enrol students who speak
multiple languages, and those students learning other languages, is
questionable. This groundbreaking work calls into question the
exclusive use of academic English in internationalising higher
education teaching and research. By interrogating the dominant
assumptions informing the monolingual mindset, Postmonolingual
Critical Thinking indicates that academically literate students can
capably use their repertoires of languages and knowledge for
educational purposes. The case for students' languages and
knowledge having a place in English-medium universities is made
through evidence of the uses of Zhongwen, academic Chinese.
Proposing to broaden the scope of languages used for knowledge
production and dissemination, this book highlights the educational
potential of multilingualism. Postmonolingual Critical Thinking
makes a unique proposal: that universities which recruit doctoral
students from Asia create education policy practices that enable
them to extend their multilingual capabilities. Arguing that by
drawing on intellectual resources from their various languages,
students construct knowledge of critical thinking in complex,
interesting and potentially innovative ways, this book guides
higher education institutions in putting this into practice. It
outlines a pragmatic approach for universities to explore the
potential of multipolar, multilingual education, while being
attentive to the tensions posed by assertions of a monolingual
mindset. Postmonolingual Critical Thinking has the potential to
create great change in a higher education sector which is mired by
a monolingual approach to graduate training. This unique and
thought-provoking book is essential reading for those in the fields
of applied linguistics, comparative education, higher education,
international studies, teacher education and translation studies.
This book argues that the neoliberal globalisation of higher
education faces a need for recalibration. In light of increased
concerns from universities in cultivating globalisation, this
volume brings together a multi-ethnic and multilingual team of
researchers who argue that the continued development of
internationalized education now requires new research and
practices. As university leaders seek to build the best programs to
help students to go abroad, they can face a number of challenges -
risk management, negotiating with diverse partners, designing rich
experience-based learning and the hopes, fears and limitations of
the students themselves. Consequently, the authors argue that
changes are particularly important given the current US-centric and
UK-centric structural readjustments to globalization policies
across all fields of higher education and knowledge production.
This multi-perspectival edited collection will appeal to students
and scholars of global education, globalization and international
education.
This book explores pedagogical concepts, metaphors and images of
non-white, non-western researchers and research students on the
inter/nationalization of education. Specifically, this book draws
on the intellectual resources of China and India to explore the
pedagogical dynamics and dimensions of the
localization/globalization of education with non-Western
characteristics. It introduces theoretic-linguistic non-Western
concepts from the Tamil, Sanskrit and Chinese languages for use in
Western, English-only education and redefines the intellectual
basis for internationalising education. Debating whether
'international education' is Western-centric in terms of its
privileging and promotion of Euro-American theoretical knowledge,
this book contends that the internationalisation of Western-centric
education can benefit from the intellectual power and powerfully
relevant theorising performed by non-Western international
students. It formulates a democratic vision for the
internationalisation of education, with the potential to create
transnational solidarity and constitute a forum for mobilising
debates about global knowledge and power structures. It also
provides key tools to use non-Western theoretic-linguistic tools
and modes of critique in research undertaken in Anglophone Western
universities.
This is the first book on global teachers and the increasingly
important phenomenon of ‘brain circulation’ in the global
teaching profession. A teaching qualification is a passport to an
international professional career: the global teacher is found in
more and more classrooms around the world today. It is a two-way
movement. This book looks at the growing importance of immigrant
teachers in western countries today and at teachers who exit from
western countries (emigrant teachers) seeking teaching experience
in other countries. Drawing on the international literature in
Europe, North America, Asia and elsewhere supplemented by
rich insights derived from recent Australian research, the book
outlines the personal, institutional and structural processes
nationally and internationally underlying the increasing global
circulation of teachers. It identifies the key drivers of global
teacher mobility:Â a range of factors including family,
lifestyle, classroom experience, travel, opportunities for
advancement, discipline, linguistic skills, taxation rates,
cultural factors and institutional frameworks and policy support.
The book is the first detailed contemporary account of the
experiences of Australian immigrant and emigrant teachers in the
schools and communities where they teach and live. It makes an
important and original theoretical and empirical contribution to
the contemporary fields of sociology of education and immigration
studies.
Because « globalization is expressed in many ways and evokes
complex responses, it demands various lines of analysis.
Globalizing Education shows how this phenomenon is mediated and
mitigated by a range of educational policies, pedagogies, and
politics. It identifies the forms of educational governance
associated with neoliberal globalism and their manifold effects on
nation-state education systems, highlighting the colonizing
minority-world imperatives and retraditionalizing ramifications. It
also shows how the global cultural economy - the disjunctive flows
of images, people, and ideas - both challenges and reinforces
conventional educational trajectories. The global/national
mesh-works created by drugs, technology, and unions are among the
complicated connecivities explored. This book exposes the more
pernicious effects on education of neo-liberal and corporate
globalization and explores and identifies innovative and
transformative educational policies, pedagogies, and politics.
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