Global Issues in Education
Pedagogy, Policy, Practice, and the Minority Experience
Contributions by Ruth Ahn, Stephen Bahry, Patrick Darkhor, Joan DeJaeghere, Linda Furuto, Charles B. Hutchison, Daniel Kirk Macon State College, Jungmin Seo, Jia Luo, Jody Lynn McBrien, Luise Prior McCarty, Obed Mfum-Mensah, Shirley Miske, Kwabena Dei Ofori-Attah, Debora Hinderliter Ortloff, Theresa Perez, JoAnn Phillion, Lan Quach, Alicia Trotman, Jean Walrond, Yuxiang Wang, Kenneth Wilburn Edited by Greg Wiggan, Charles B. Hutchison
Publication date:
16 September 2009Length of book:
440 pagesPublisher
R&L EducationDimensions:
261x181mm7x10"
ISBN-13: 9781607092728
Global Issues in Education bridges the discourse on globalization and education with international studies on race, class, gender, ethnicity, culture, and multiculturalism. The contributors to this volume address educational challenges of post-colonial Ghana, the United Arab Emirates, the Caribbean, China, and Germany juxtaposed against Western education in the United Kingdom and the United States. They synthesize macrosociology with educational research, which provides readers with the background, core knowledge, and global focus that is needed to understand international issues, as well as deal with diversity in the classroom. Global Issues in Education also addresses the need for additional research that makes the connections between the geopolitical economy and education, and it does this with a focus on the link to culture, ethnicity, and education.
In Global Issues in Education, professors Wiggan and Hutchison have assembled a stellar array of international scholars whose research and scholarship highlight the intersection of globalization with schooling, diversity, race, ethnicity, gender, and poverty. Solid in its substance and panoramic in its scope, the authors of this very important book critique schooling as a key institutional and discursive site where cultural forms and practices are constituted, transmitted, and transformed. With theintellectual and scholarly foundation provided by Wiggan and Hutchison, collectively, these authors critically assess how the political, social, and economic structures throughout the world have shaped the nature, content, and focus of schooling in various societies. The authors go beyond the dominant narratives within particular societies and their schooling systems, however, by specifically highlighting the consequences for minority (and historically marginalized) populations within these respective societies. While offering insightful intellectual and scholarly analysis, the authors also provide educators and students with the necessary theoretical and pedagogical tools in their quest to better understand how globalism intersects with race, gender, and