Social Geographies of Educational Change
Contributor(s): Hernandez, F [editor.] | Goodson, I. F [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: BookPublisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2005.Description: XXIII, 173 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781402024955.Subject(s): Education | School management and organization | School administration | Education | Administration, Organization and LeadershipDDC classification: 371.2 Online resources: Click here to access onlineItem type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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E books | PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur | Available | EBK1689 |
Educational change: from the analysis of conditions of achieving to the relevance of personal biographies -- Accomplishing Large Scale reform: A Tri-Level Proposition -- Understanding Curriculum Change: Some Warnings about Restructuring Initiatives -- Beyond School Walls: creating networks in education -- Social Networks in Teaching -- The Work of the National Writing Project: Social Practices in a Network Context -- Networks of Schools and Constructing Citizenship in Secondary Education -- Gazes on education protagonists -- Cultures of Schooling. No Place for Women? -- Mapping Visual Cultural Narratives to Explore Adolescents’ Identities -- The Parent Gap: The Emotional Geographies of Teacher-Parent Relationships -- Looking Technology from the other Side of the Mirror -- The Merger of ICT and Education: Should it Necessarily be an Exercise in the Eternal Recurrence of the Reinvention of the Wheel? -- Virtual Geographies of Educational Change: The More Complex the Problems the Simpler the Answers.
Social Geographies, as spatial location, is a factor relevant to understanding the variety of people’s interpretations and appropriations of educational innovations and changes. Their location in the social space also influences their response to change. In the field of educational change, social space means for example, skin colour, gender distribution of teachers in one school, children’s self-cultural representations or parents’ religious attitudes. By using the notion of Social Geographies in the context of educational change, the authors address the following questions: How initiatives in a classroom or department are influenced by the surrounding context of the school, the district or the nation; How innovation spreads or diffuses from one school to another; How and whether reforms can be scaled up from a few schools to a whole system; How seemingly standardised reforms affect schools differently depending on where they are located; How schools influence one another; How the identities of, and interrelationships among, schools are affected by technology, principles of market competition and choice, and other initiatives. This volume is relevant to educationalists, policy-makers, teachers, and students interested in a more complex approach to understand and intervene in educational change processes.
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