Schools and Informal Learning in a Knowledge-Based World

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Academic Family
Active Learning Methodologies
assessment of informal knowledge
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Category=JNF
Category=JNK
Category=JNLB
Category=JNLC
CGGE Module
Chinese Taipei
Citizenship Education
Civic Education
Civic Knowledge
Civic Knowledge Test
Civic Learning
civic learning practices
education policy
Education System
Educational Ecosystem
educational systems reform
Environmental Issues
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
formal learning
Free Choice Learning Experiences
Geography Education
Geospatial Thinking
global dimension for education
Global Geography Education
Global Universities
IBL Approach
IEA Civic Education Study
informal education research
Informal Learning
institutional theory of educational policy
integrating formal and informal education
Italian Higher Education System
Latinx Students
learning environments
lifelong learning theory
Negatively Related
Pre-service Geography Teachers
school management
social mobility
Stem Specialist
student agency development

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032089287
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book has two purposes: To open up the debate on the role of informal education in schooling systems and to suggest the kind of school organizational environment that can best facilitate the recognition of informal learning. Successive chapters explore what is often seen as a duality between informal and formal learning. This duality is particularly so because education systems expend so much time and effort in certifying formal knowledge often expressed in school subjects reflecting academic disciplines.Recognizing the contribution informal learning can make to young people’s understanding and development does not negate the importance of valued social knowledge: That complements it. Students come to school with knowledge learnt from their families, peers, the community and both traditional and social media. They should not have to "unlearn" this in order to enter the world of formal learning. Rather, students’ different learning "worlds" should be integrated so that each informs the other. In a knowledge-based society, all learning needs to be valued.

Some contributors to this book reflect on how new educational systems could be created in a move away from top-down authoritarian and bureaucratic management. Such open systems are seen to be more welcoming in acknowledging the importance of informal learning. Others provide practical examples of how informal learning is currently recognized. Some attention is also paid to the evaluation of informal learning. A key objective of the work presented here is to stimulate debate about the role of informal learning in knowledge-based societies and to stimulate thinking about the kind of reforms needed to create more open and more democratic school learning environments.

Javier Calvo De Mora is a Professor of School Organisation at the University of Granada, Spain. His main research interest is in policy, institutional collaboration and leadership studies. He is currently coordinator of the European Network on Research on Citizenship Education.

Kerry J. Kennedy is a Professor Emeritus, Advisor (Academic Development) and Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Governance and Citizenship at The Education University of Hong Kong. He is also a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Johannesburg.