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Policy documents from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) and UNESCO have stressed the need to prepare
students for what has been termed a VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain,
Complex, and Ambiguous) world. The COVID-19 pandemic is an extreme
case of a VUCA event that grants the opportunity to examine whether
special and inclusive education is fully prepared for these complex
situations. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Special and Inclusive
Education in a Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous (VUCA)
World provides insights and examples from scholars in different
disciplines across different regions, contexts, and systems. These
ideas will help to shape how special students, teachers, and all
the managerial components as a whole, will need to adapt to sustain
and maintain inclusion in education in the circumstances of a VUCA
world.
In many countries across the Asia Pacific region, people are
adapting to the new demographic shift, but there is nonetheless
much concern. This book documents the various educational
approaches rendered by both public and private sectors to enable
elderly individuals in their own countries to re-engage in society
more inclusively, to stay longer in the labour market, and to
become less dependent on the state or their families. In order to
produce active, healthy, and productive aging citizens, the
experiments showcased by this book highlight how adaptive action is
needed across many policy areas, with emphasis on shaping
structural differences in the composition and organisation of
higher education systems that can better foster lifelong learning
among elderly citizens. The book is a great venue to underline the
interplay of the theory and practices of vastly complex challenges.
In many countries across the Asia Pacific region, people are
adapting to the new demographic shift, but there is nonetheless
much concern. This book documents the various educational
approaches rendered by both public and private sectors to enable
elderly individuals in their own countries to re-engage in society
more inclusively, to stay longer in the labour market, and to
become less dependent on the state or their families. In order to
produce active, healthy, and productive aging citizens, the
experiments showcased by this book highlight how adaptive action is
needed across many policy areas, with emphasis on shaping
structural differences in the composition and organisation of
higher education systems that can better foster lifelong learning
among elderly citizens. The book is a great venue to underline the
interplay of the theory and practices of vastly complex challenges.
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