Culture, Transnational Education and Thinking

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A01=Niranjan Casinader
African Educators
Australian Curriculum Assessment
Author_Niranjan Casinader
Brookfi Eld
Category=JNA
Category=JNF
Category=JNK
cognitive development
Community Problem Solving
comparative education
cross-cultural thinking programme evaluation
Cultural Dispositions
Cultural Educational Contexts
Cultural Metaphors
Cultural Neo-imperialism
Culture
curriculum
curriculum transfer
Education
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fps
FPSPI
Future Problem Solving Program
Future Problem Solving Program International
Future Scene
Global Schooling
Individual Problem Solving
Industrialised Development
intercultural pedagogy
Interdependent Disposition
Interdependent Perspectives
International Life Experience
international school education
international schooling research
Malaysian Educators
multicultural teacher training
pedagogy
primary
Regional Affi Liates
secondary
Socio-economic Development
South African Educators
Thinking Disposition
Transcultural Disposition
transnational education practice
Treffi Nger

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415723503
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 May 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The notion of thinking skills as a key component of a 21st century school education is now firmly entrenched in educational policy and curriculum frameworks in many parts of the world. However, there has been relatively little questioning of the manner in which educational globalisation has facilitated this diffusion of thinking skills, curriculum and pedagogy in a cultural context. This book will help to redress such an imbalance in its critical assessment of the cross-cultural validity of transplanting thinking skills programs from one educational system to another on an international scale.

Culture, Transnational Education and Thinking provides an international comparative study of the intersection of three educational concepts: culture, education and thinking. Drawing on case studies from Malaysia, South Africa and Australia/USA for the purposes of comparative analysis, the book employs the context of an international school program in the teaching of thinking skills, Future Problem Solving Program International. The book explores the associations between Future Problem Solving educators, their cultural background, and their approaches to thinking, evaluating the relevance of transferring thinking skills programs derived in one cultural framework into another. The book also discusses the wider implications of these cross-cultural comparisons to curriculum and pedagogy within schools and higher education, with a particular emphasis on the teaching of multicultural school-based classes and cross-cultural understandings in teacher education and professional development.

This book will be of relevance to academics and higher education students who have an interest in the fields of cross-cultural and intercultural understanding, comparative studies in education, and theories and practices of cognition, as well as the development of tertiary and secondary curricula and associated pedagogies that specifically acknowledge the cultural diversities of both teacher and learner.

Niranjan Casinader is a lecturer in curriculum and assessment in the Faculty of Education at Monash University, Australia, teaching undergraduate and postgraduate units across primary and secondary teacher education. His research interests focus on the impact of the historical and contemporary globalisation of education on curriculum, pedagogy and leadership, with particular reference to culture, problem-solving capacity, humanities education and postcolonialism. He has been concerned with thinking education for over twenty years, and is currently involved in the leadership of a nonprofit organisation concerned with the teaching of thinking and problem-solving skills at both the Australian and global levels. In 2013, Niranjan was presented with the AARE Early Career Researcher Award, and in 2014 he received the Emerging Researcher Fellowship Award and the Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (Monash University, Australia).

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