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Showing 1 to 15 of 197 results
Maussen, Marcel; Bader, Veit – Comparative Education, 2015
The European Convention on Human Rights guarantees freedom of education, including opportunities to create and operate faith-based schools. But as European societies become religiously more diverse and "less religious" at the same time, the role of religious schools increasingly is being contested. Serious tensions have emerged between…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Religious Education, Role, Foreign Countries
Cowen, Robert – Comparative Education, 2014
Comparative education as a field of study in universities (and "comparative education" as practised by nineteenth-century administrators of education in Canada, England, France and the USA) has always addressed the theme of "transfer": that is, the movement of educational ideas, principles and practices, and institutions and…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Practices, Educational Policy, Reputation
Elliott, Julian G. – Comparative Education, 2014
This paper considers attempts to import pedagogic practices from other educational systems. In so doing, it focuses upon policymakers' attempts to: (a) import interactive whole class teaching approaches to the UK (and, to a lesser extent, the US); and (b) export learner-centred pedagogies, largely derived from Anglo-American theorising and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Student Centered Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
Zhang, Donghui; Chen, Lipeng – Comparative Education, 2014
In response to the recent heightened interethnic conflicts that were regarded as threatening national unity and stability, the Chinese government issued "ethnic solidarity education" as a top-down, centrally administered mandate to be implemented "correctly" and in a standardised way by schools throughout China. This paper…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Multicultural Education, Ethnicity, Conflict
Brock, Colin – Comparative Education, 2013
This article examines the synergy between a long established discipline, geography, and the younger discipline of educational studies, especially its component, comparative education. Although this synergy was recognised by the founding father of comparative education, Michael Sadler, and one of his principal followers, George Bereday, the…
Descriptors: Geography, History, Fused Curriculum, Educational Philosophy
Schulte, Barbara – Comparative Education, 2013
Both in China and internationally, educators and policy makers claim that vocational education and training (VET) is essential for the sound economic development of a country and the physical and social well-being of its population. However, China looks back upon a century-long history of rejection when it comes to popularising VET, despite…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Foreign Countries, Economic Development, Educational History
Singh, Madhu – Comparative Education, 2013
The paper examines education practice in India in terms of the division between indigenous cultures on the one hand, and the formal culture of learning and knowledge systems inherited from colonial times on the other. These "two Indias" are still reflected in the modern educational system in India, seen in the vast differences between the formal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Practices, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Policy
O'Donoghue, Tom; Harford, Judith – Comparative Education, 2012
This paper is a response to David Limond's exposition, "[An] historical culture ... rapidly, universally, and thoroughly restored"? British influence on Irish education since 1922, which appeared in "Comparative Education", Vol. 46, No. 4, November 2010, pp. 449-462. Limond's overall thesis is that "a post-colonial overhang affects Irish…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Middle Class, Catholics, Comparative Education
Ramirez, Francisco O. – Comparative Education, 2012
For decades the world society perspective has influenced comparative research on a broad range of issues across the social sciences. The perspective emerged to make sense of an empirical puzzle: why did nation-state after nation-state expand mass schooling after World War II? The perspective evolved to address broader issues such as the authority…
Descriptors: World History, Educational Practices, Mass Instruction, Research
Clegg, John; Afitska, Oksana – Comparative Education, 2011
In sub-Saharan Africa, education conducted through a European language is associated with low school achievement. Both teachers and learners may often not be fluent enough to use the language as a medium of instruction. In these circumstances, both also make use of a common African language. They switch between two languages in the plenary…
Descriptors: African Languages, Bilingual Education, Foreign Countries, Bilingualism
Oppenheim, Willy; Stambach, Amy – Comparative Education Review, 2014
Comparative and international studies of education that focus on policy borrowing and transfer must be expanded to account for aspects of what Terence Halliday and Bruce Carruthers call "global norm-making." Such an approach examines how global policies are refracted within divergent but interrelated sociopolitical and economic contexts,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Mainstreaming, Gender Differences
Ouedraogo, Philippe – Comparative Education, 2010
In the following paper, I am going to discuss education and religion and consider the legacy of Christianity in education in West Africa with particular reference to the Evangelical churches in Burkina Faso. The paper will start with a general introduction to West Africa and the place of missionaries' activities in the region. I will then attempt…
Descriptors: Christianity, Foreign Countries, Role, Educational Practices
Altinyelken, Hulya K. – Comparative Education, 2010
There has been an unprecedented interest in reforming pedagogical practices in sub-Saharan Africa in the past two decades. The reform efforts are often characterised by a move away from teacher-centred instruction to child-centred pedagogy (CCP). Uganda has been no exception to this trend as the new curriculum adopted the principles of CCP and…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes
Lauglo, Jon – Comparative Education, 2010
More than four decades ago, Philip J. Foster (1927-2008) published an essay on the "The vocational school fallacy in development planning," drawing on research on schools in Ghana. That essay has been reprinted in numerous texts and remains frequently quoted in recent research literature. What were his main general insights about vocational…
Descriptors: Vocational Schools, Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Intellectual History
Steiner-Khamsi, Gita – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2014
Because educational research has grown more global in nature over the course of the last few decades, researchers find themselves questioning how best to conceptualize content and establish distinct levels in educational research. Globalization has exacerbated the need to rethink culture and context, to understand how and why similar content are,…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational Research, Global Approach

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