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Hardbound. Where is the comparative and international study of
education heading in the 21st Century? What are the current
theoretical issues, problems, and practices that need to be
discussed, reviewed, and debated? How have specific sub-fields
fared over the past decade? Our discipline appears poised to take a
leadership role in policy debates and decisions, as well as
comparative scholarship throughout the world, but first we need to
examine where we need to go.To foster this conversation we have
been asked to revive the annual review-of-the-field book series,
International Perspectives on Education and Society, for Elsevier
Science Ltd. The intent is to have a combination of
state-of-the-field reviews, new scholarship, and critical
discussions of major topics in the comparative and international
field of education.
Originally published in 1984. This annotated bibliography is a
comprehensive record of English-language materials which focus on
Education in the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German
Democratic Republic (GDR). It provides an excellent resource to
scholars, beginning with a long introductory chapter about the role
of education, formal and non-formal, in the two Germanies. The
socio-historical context is presented but also the authors offer
discussion of educational research trends. The bibliography is
structured in useful thematic chapters and within the categories
then split into those relating to East and West Germany.
Originally published in 1995. This study of the integration of East
and West German education following the collapse of the German
Democratic Republic in 1989 focuses on policy formation and
implementation during this period of great social and political
turbulence. It is the result of a research project undertaken
shortly after the unification. The authors lived in East Germany
for a full year, looking carefully at individual schools,
vocational training centers, teacher colleges, and universities.
The book considers questions of how education policy is
successfully formulated, conditions in which that policy is
implemented and the consequences of the implemented educational
reform. The first chapters present the context and history of
German education and the later chapters discuss the unification and
the formation of the new school laws and the successes and
failures. The authors' research shows that even before the
unification East Germans had already opted for a system consistent
with West German education law. However, the West Germans
disregarded these changes and imposed their own version of reform
on East Germany. The German situation at this time is of great
interest to all educators, particularly students of educational
policy making, as well as researchers in political science,
economics, and sociology.
Originally published in 1984. This annotated bibliography is a
comprehensive record of English-language materials which focus on
Education in the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German
Democratic Republic (GDR). It provides an excellent resource to
scholars, beginning with a long introductory chapter about the role
of education, formal and non-formal, in the two Germanies. The
socio-historical context is presented but also the authors offer
discussion of educational research trends. The bibliography is
structured in useful thematic chapters and within the categories
then split into those relating to East and West Germany.
Originally published in 1995. This study of the integration of East
and West German education following the collapse of the German
Democratic Republic in 1989 focuses on policy formation and
implementation during this period of great social and political
turbulence. It is the result of a research project undertaken
shortly after the unification. The authors lived in East Germany
for a full year, looking carefully at individual schools,
vocational training centers, teacher colleges, and universities.
The book considers questions of how education policy is
successfully formulated, conditions in which that policy is
implemented and the consequences of the implemented educational
reform. The first chapters present the context and history of
German education and the later chapters discuss the unification and
the formation of the new school laws and the successes and
failures. The authors' research shows that even before the
unification East Germans had already opted for a system consistent
with West German education law. However, the West Germans
disregarded these changes and imposed their own version of reform
on East Germany. The German situation at this time is of great
interest to all educators, particularly students of educational
policy making, as well as researchers in political science,
economics, and sociology.
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