12,558 results on '"AREA studies"'
Search Results
2. Employing Critical Visual Methodologies in Development Education: An Auto-Ethnographic Inquiry
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John N. Ponsaran
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Through auto-ethnography, this paper explores the use of critical visual methodologies as a pedagogical approach in teaching and learning development studies based on the author's lived experiences and living encounters as a development educator for the last two decades of his academic career. Specifically, the study unpacks the adoption of this critical pedagogy in classroom instruction as well as in the degree's community-based practicum program. Conventional and non-conventional visual literacy strategies were also covered and analyzed in the specific context of researching vulnerable groups and communities. The visual data that were explored by this qualitative inquiry encompassed visually oriented course tasks which include the production of photographs, audio-visual presentations, posters, editorial cartoons, and sociological cartoons, among others. In ensuring coherence and complementarity in critical visual methodologies in development education, there is a need to synergize critical constructs with c
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- 2024
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3. Cooperative Collection Development: Current Practices among ARL Libraries for Area Studies Collections
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Brian Vetruba and David Faust
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This study examines cooperative collection development (CCD) for area studies and foreign language collections at Association of Research Libraries (ARL) libraries, based on a 2020 survey. Respondents provided details about cooperative collection initiatives (CCIs) at their libraries and their attitudes toward CCD. Most respondents had a favorable opinion of CCD, citing access to a broader collection of materials and cost savings as primary reasons. Challenges include the work and time involved in managing CCIs. This composite picture of how libraries build collaborative collections and the perceived benefits and challenges of CCD will inform librarians and administrators alike as they consider how best to build area studies and foreign language collections.
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- 2024
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4. Department of Education: Employment Information for Key Grant Programs That Foster Expertise in World Languages and Cultures. Report to Congressional Requesters. GAO-23-105971
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US Government Accountability Office (GAO) and Emrey-Arras, Melissa
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In today's interconnected world, many career fields--such as diplomacy, national security, and business--need individuals with knowledge about world languages and cultures. To address these areas of needed expertise--both at the federal level as well as in the education, business, and nonprofit sectors--the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, authorizes The Department of Education's Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) and National Resource Center (NRC) grant programs. The US Government Accountability Office was asked to review how these programs support employment in areas of need. Among other issues, this report addresses how selected grantee universities describe encouraging employment in areas of need in their grant applications, and what Education's most recent survey of FLAS graduates shows about respondents' employment outcomes. GAO reviewed relevant application narratives from a non-generalizable sample of 27 NRC grantee universities (25 of which were also FLAS grantees) and grouped employment activities described by grantees into nine categories. These grantees comprised about 23 percent of all fiscal year 2022 NRC and FLAS grantee universities. GAO also analyzed the results from Education's 2019 survey of FLAS graduates, the most recent available. Due to the differences in the structure of the FLAS and NRC programs, Education does not administer a similar survey to NRC grantees. In addition, GAO reviewed relevant federal laws and regulations and program documents, and interviewed officials from Education.
- Published
- 2023
5. Disrupting Hierarchy in Education: Students and Teachers Collaborating for Social Change. Teaching for Social Justice Series
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Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Hana Huskic, Christina M. Noto, Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Hana Huskic, and Christina M. Noto
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This timely book features rich examples of students and teachers, defined as learning partners, disrupting hierarchy in education by collaborating on social change projects. At the book's core is Paulo Freire's theorization of students and teachers working together toward co-liberation. Co-written by learning partners, each chapter in this collection highlights a social change project that puts Freire's theories into action. Projects span a range of academic disciplines and geographical locations from K-12, university/college, and nonformal educational contexts. Appropriate as both a textbook and a primer on collaborative social change-making, "Disrupting Hierarchy in Education" offers inspiration and models of community-engaged learning programs from across the globe. Topics include community education, public writing, using media for popular education, adolescent and youth development, climate change education, peace and justice leadership development, revolutionary nonviolence, literacy teacher education, citizenship education, development of Latin American studies, palliative care, reflections on identity and subjectivity, antiracism education, trauma-informed pedagogy, wellness, and art curation. Book Features: (1) Real-world examples of teaching and learning for social justice in ways that disrupt traditional educational hierarchy; (2) Chapters co-written by diverse learning partners: educators (e.g. elementary school teachers and professors), undergraduate and graduate students, youth advocates, artists, curators, and founders and leaders of NGOs; (3) Projects that cover a wide terrain, including K-12 settings, university/college, wellness, arts, media, and popular education; (4) Examples from across the globe, including the United States, Brazil, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and Jamaica; and (5) Discussion questions and/or suggested activities at the end of each chapter. [Foreword written by Antonia Darder. Afterword written by Monisha Bajaj.]
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- 2024
6. Depictions of Rural & Appalachian Culture(s) in Comics & Graphic Novels
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Jason D. DeHart
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In this article, a native of Appalachia who has worked in secondary and post-secondary literacy education examines the ways that comics depict life in the region. Particular attention is given to the exploration of the paranormal found in the work of Brian Level, and Level serves as a first-hand voice in this researched work. Additionally, the author explores comics that focus the Appalachian region in terms of masculinity, roles of women, and domestic life, alongside other social norms. In sum, the author wishes to push back on limited and problematic visions of the region, and to comment on the ways in which Appalachian life is rich, diverse, and profligate with literacy practices. The strength of female characters, mysticism in the region, and dialectical distinctions all emerge as patterns from the author's reading across visual literature, and the beauty of the region finds representation as well as juxtaposition with imagery in counterpoint through comics work.
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- 2023
7. Rooted in Appalachia: Empowering Rural Students to Envision & Enact Possible Selves in Postsecondary Education
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Andrea Arce-Trigatti, Ada Haynes, and Jacob Kelley
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Scholarship underscores the experiences of Appalachian students who must confront a social reality that consistently expects less from them because of their circumstances and the narratives surrounding their social context (Collins, 2020; Piene et al., 2020). Traditionally, the Appalachian people have been viewed by educators from a deficit approach although some theorists are transitioning to see the value in Appalachian people and, using this alternative lens, are approaching the Appalachian identity with more place-based pedagogies such as funds of knowledge (Collins, 2020; Piene et al., 2020). These culturally responsive approaches see value in the region's people and scaffolds a positive learning environment on the cultural heritages and identities of the region and allows students to expand their views of possible selves. In turn, this contribution explores the pedagogical approaches embodied in possible selves as a theory that builds on rural and small community assets and successes as related to the social resources and capital that rural students represent. Specifically, we look at the connections that possible selves as a theory makes to rural students' socioeconomic, sociocultural, and sociohistorical contexts and how this theory can accentuate concepts like social capital with respect to postsecondary student success.
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- 2023
8. Community-Engaged Learning in Liberal Arts Colleges: Developing Engaged Citizens
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Baker, Vicki L. and Walling, Carrie Booth
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Employing an institutional case study approach, this manuscript features two high-impact learning opportunities open to Albion College students who seek to contribute to solving real-world problems in collaboration with local and surrounding communities: Albion College Community Collaborative (AC3) and Human Rights Lab. The programmatic approach to community-engaged partnerships featured sought to elevate local knowledge, promote engaged citizenship, and advance social, political, and economic change. We describe each program followed by lessons learned and critical considerations to advance the field and to inform the work of others seeking to employ a programmatic approach.
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- 2023
9. Hijacked: The Capture of America's Middle East Studies Centers
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National Association of Scholars (NAS) and Arnold, Neetu
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America's Middle East Studies Centers (MESCs) were originally founded to study the politics, culture, and language of Middle Eastern nations. But our analyses and case studies demonstrate that Middle East centers have since shifted their focus to promoting left-wing ideologies. "Hijacked: The Capture of America's Middle East Studies Centers" tells the story of how such research can become captured by activist faculty and foreign governments. In documenting the history of MESCs and the financial arrangements that allow foreign donations to flow to American Universities, "Hijacked" also offers recommendations to reform Middle East Studies Centers.
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- 2022
10. Teaching Political Science in the Age of Internationalisation: A Survey of Local and International Students
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Ying-ho Kwong and Mathew Y. H. Wong
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This article explores the issue of internationalisation in the teaching of political science at universities. We first provide an overview of the mix of courses in terms of geographical focus offered by high-ranking political science departments. Second, with survey data from students, we assess the factors affecting their attitudes towards area-specific and general politics courses. The results indicate that, compared to local students who prefer local politics courses, international students are most interested in those with a mid-range scope such as those containing cross-case comparisons. This paper encourages integrating comparative elements even in area-specific politics courses to enhance student engagement.
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- 2024
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11. 'Anti-Glocality' Grounds New Quebec History Program
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Bradley, Jon and Allison, Sam
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In sharp contrast to the musings of a senior student, the mandatory history texts follow a narrow provincial orientation. The recently introduced Quebec high school history program offers adolescents a slanted narrative devoid of larger interconnected contexts as hailed; for example, by Oakeshott (2004), MacMillan (2009), and/or Canadine (2013). In our view, secondary students are forced to travel a historical journey that deals with Canadian and Quebec events through a "unique" Quebec lens (Woods, 2014). The widely engrained twenty-first century concept of global interconnectedness, first articulated on a wide scale over a hundred years ago (Wells, 1920), has been replaced by one anchored in a retro-nineteenth-century construct viewing only carefully selected unconnected historical snippets devoid of a contextualized narrative. Anchored in a narrow political perspective, this secondary course of study forces adolescents into a stilted and fragmented "patch-work" historical landscape. This journey silences many voices, brushes others from the chronicle, and twists recognized historiography to fit a specific contemporary self-determined internalized orientation. We review the official course of study to unpack several major world themes demonstrating this constrained point-of-view via a close investigation of one of the approved English language student texts. Further, we illustrate how the deliberate manipulation of historical stories, as well as "alternate facts," leads adolescents into a realm deprived of meaningful connections.
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- 2021
12. Reshaping Canadian History Education in Support of Reconciliation
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Gibson, Lindsay and Case, Roland
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Scholars disagree about the implications of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Calls to Action for history educators and curriculum developers. Some scholars contend that responding to these Calls to Action requires rejecting the discipline of history and historical thinking approaches currently being implemented in history and social studies curricula in several Canadian jurisdictions because they are derived from an ethnocentric Western epistemology. In this article, we propose three significant and important changes to Canadian history education in support of reconciliation, some of which are already underway, albeit imperfectly, and each of which can be implemented without radical epistemological restructuring.
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- 2019
13. Paradoxes of Global and Local Development in the Film 'Verónico Cruz. La deuda interna': A Hybrid Discussion Group in Spanish for Specific Purposes
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Fernández, Ana M.
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The detrimental effects of neoliberalism accompany globalization. The paradoxes generated by the global-regional gap have revealed local cultures' double vulnerability to national and international development. Miguel Pereira fictionalizes this complex phenomenon in the film "Verónico Cruz. La deuda interna" (Argentina, 1988). Inspired by the autobiographical narrative of Fortunato Ramos, a rural teacher and artist, the film denounces the sociohistorical and economic inequality suffered by the Qulla culture in Jujuy. In the context of Latin American studies, rooted in Pereira's fiction, we propose a non-credit hybrid workshop in advanced Spanish for Specific Purposes (SSP) at the University of Ottawa, which was also presented at the II JEFE-Vi Conference, Vienna University of Economics and Business--WU, 2019. This 16-hour discussion group is based on Michael S. Doyle and Bruce Fryer's studies, and it implements some principles of andragogy (Knowles) and suggestopedy (Lozanov). Through the themes explored (necessity, consumer needs, the vicious circle of poverty, globalization, technology), it aims to sensitize participants to the global economic development and its impact on the fragile Qulla culture in Jujuy, Argentina. To facilitate participants' examination of social inequality, it applies the neologism minori'ethage. Students' self-assessment process is based on the entries in their learning contracts and diaries, as well as their in-class and online participation.
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- 2021
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14. Transforming the Canadian History Classroom: Imagining a New 'We'
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Cutrara, Samantha and Cutrara, Samantha
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We are all our history. Yet in Canadian classrooms, students are often left questioning how they can study a past that does not reflect their present. Despite curricular revisions, the mainstream narrative that shapes the way we teach students about the Canadian nation can be divisive, separating "us" from "them." Responding to the evolving demographics of an ethnically and culturally heterogeneous population, "Transforming the Canadian History Classroom" is a call for a radically innovative approach that instead places students -- the stories they carry and the histories they want to be part of -- at the centre of history education. Samantha Cutrara offers a practical and theoretical guide to creating a learning environment in which students can investigate the historical narratives that infuse their lives and imagine a future that makes room for their diverse identities. She explores how teaching practices and institutional contexts can support ideas of connection, complexity, and care in order to engender meaningful learning and foster a student-centric history education. Drawing on student and teacher interviews and case studies in schools, this progressive study demonstrates how developing a sense of national identity in all Canadian youth can be grounded in the praxis and pedagogies of today's history education. Both in-training and practising teachers in history and social studies education need this book to inform their work, as do students and scholars of Canadian studies and critical pedagogy.
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- 2020
15. 'I Love How We Developed a Community Already': A Graduate Student Orientation Model for Minority-Serving Programs and Institutions
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Barrera, Magdalena L.
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In recent years, an increasing number of universities have qualified as Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), thanks in part to significant growth in the numbers of Latinx students who are enrolling in bachelor's degree programs. A greater proportion of this student population is completing bachelor's degrees and continuing into master's and doctoral programs. Nevertheless, graduate orientation remains overlooked despite being a rich opportunity to support the identity development of Latinx students. This pedagogical reflection contributes to the discussion of Latinx student experiences by exploring an innovative approach to new graduate student orientation for a master's program in a Chicana/o Studies department at an MSI. The orientation provides holistic support for Latinx students by building an academic community founded on mutual support and bringing greater transparency to the hidden curriculum of graduate education that often elides Latinx students. The essay explores insights from student feedback on the orientation and provides reflection questions to help departments and MSIs bring a more equity-minded, supportive approach to welcoming and retaining new Latinx graduate students.
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- 2020
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16. USA-Latin American Experiential Learning Project: The Instructor Balancing Act
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Zwerg-Villegas, Anne Marie and Hiller, George L.
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Experiential learning (EL) projects require planning, patience, and commitment on the part of the organizing and facilitating instructors. Language, culture, time zone, and institutional diversity exacerbates the inherent difficulties in conducting virtual, international EL projects. This manuscript discusses an ongoing multi-country project between a prestigious private university in the United States and several Latin American university contributors to execute a joint student experiential learning consulting project. The authors develop an intuitive instructor-focused jobs demands-resources model of involvement in international, virtual, experiential learning projects and triangulate the propositions with extant literature, interview responses in the ongoing case project, and survey data from participants in a similar project.
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- 2020
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17. Impromptu Learning: Unplanned Occurrences, Intended Outcomes
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Jefferies, Julián and Nguyen, Angela-MinhTu
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During a study abroad experience on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, participants found themselves in an "impromptu learning experience" that extended their learning beyond Puerto Rican culture to real-world debates of tourist development, environmental issues, and the struggles of the native population. In this paper, we introduce impromptu learning: an unplanned experiential learning experience, triggered by a significant and personalized incident, that engages, invigorates, and mobilizes students to seek further learning and knowledge. We used qualitative data in the form of interviews and students' journals to describe and elucidate the characteristics of impromptu learning. Implications of these experiences and their potential for making study abroad as well as learning in other contexts more student-led and more effective for critical consciousness are discussed. In addition, recommendations for supporting and promoting impromptu learning experiences are provided.
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- 2014
18. U. S. Government Factors Influencing an Expansion of Study Abroad in the Middle East/North Africa
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Lane-Toomey, Cara
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As the United States continued to grow as a world power throughout the later part of the twentieth century, government funding for international education grew more closely connected to its national security needs. Federal funds have contributed to the growth of Area Studies and studying Less Commonly Taught Languages (LCTLs). Within the last ten years the U.S. study abroad population selecting the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has grown by over 500% from 2000/01 to 2008/09. This remarkable growth is occurring at the same time as national security and foreign policy goals of the United States have become increasingly focused on the MENA region. Many scholars have marked events of September 11, 2001 as a critical point in U.S. history in regards to the explosion of general academic concern about the MENA region and the need for governmental personnel who are well trained in critical languages and Middle East Studies. This study therefore examines several concepts drawn from a survey of U.S. study abroad students in the MENA region and in destinations in Western Europe and Australia conducted during the fall of 2010. Employing a historical review, this research described how government has played a role in the expansion of study abroad in this area of the world by increasing the amount of area and language education available at U.S. institutions. In addition, this review has demonstrated ways in which the U.S. government has provided funds for students to study abroad in regions of the world which relate to current national security needs; areas which often are outside of the common destinations in Western Europe and Australia. (The study contains a bibliography.)
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- 2014
19. Remembering in a Context of Forgetting: Hauntings and the Old Durham Road Black Pioneer Settlement
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Norquay, Naomi
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This paper explores the data produced from an oral history project about a Black pioneer settlement in Grey County, Ontario. Twelve area residents were interviewed and the data produced points to various community practices of both remembering and forgetting. I employ Avery Gordon's (2008) theorization of ghosts and hauntings to make sense of the gaps, silences, and contradictions that populated the interviews. The paper ends with a consideration of Roger Simon's (2000, 2005) plea for a practice of remembrance that is both ethical and pedagogical.
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- 2014
20. Pedagogical Approaches and Strategies for Teaching Asia
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Chau, Donovan C.
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Asia today is the center of tremendous growth. With the continued rise of China and the influential roles of Japan and South Korea in international affairs, it is no wonder that the 21st century has been dubbed the Asian century. Outside of these influential political actors, one also see the growing political significance of Southeast Asia in world affairs, led by the city-state of Singapore and by Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim state. While there is much to be hopeful for across the region, potential conflicts are also latent, from disputed islands off the eastern shores of the Asian continent to the unresolved strategic challenge on the Korean Peninsula. Asia, truly, is a central region of international affairs today, politically and militarily. California State University, San Bernardino offers three major courses related to Asian cultures and one elective, "East Asian Politics" (PSCI 305). The course is one of the elective political science courses within the subfield of comparative politics. It has been taught three times at CSUSB, with approximately 35 students per course. Approached from a multidisciplinary perspective, including history, geography, and politics, the seminar offers an introductory overview of East Asian politics, focusing on significant countries in the region, analyzing domestic and foreign politics, and examining the policies and actions of nation-states within the region. Countries of study include Japan, Indonesia, China, Taiwan, Singapore, North Korea, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam. This article provides an overview of the course.
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- 2014
21. Making Sense of the Multiple Meanings of 'Embodied Mathematics Learning'
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Gerofsky, Susan
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The theme of 'embodiment' has become an important approach in current mathematics education research, growing in significance from the mid-1990s onward. However terminology of 'body' and 'embodiment' is used to signal multiple, widely varying meanings in this research. Studies are grounded in a number of radically different theoretical bases, with the result that mathematics education researchers do not necessarily mean the same thing at all when they refer to 'body', 'embodiment' and 'embodied mathematics learning'. In this theoretical paper, the author offers a framework for interpreting these polysemous terms in relation to their theoretical groundings, with examples from the mathematics education literature. [For the complete proceedings, see ED597799.]
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- 2014
22. The Internet and the Google Age: Prospects and Perils
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Research-publishing.net (France), James, Jonathan D., James, Jonathan D., and Research-publishing.net (France)
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"The Internet and the Google Age" commemorates the 25th Anniversary of the Internet in March 2014 and celebrates the achievements and benefits while also pointing out the limitations and perils of the Internet. It identifies the broad characteristics of the Internet age, and includes several studies that outline the educational benefits of the Internet and social media platforms like Facebook which connect families in the diaspora. "The Internet and the Google Age" also looks at the place of faith and religion on the Internet. It describes how life in our digital world is both exciting and challenging. An excellent introduction to Internet Studies, the book predicts that life will become more and more digitalized and how the current demarcation between private and public spheres, home and office, human and non humans (robots) will become less and less apparent as the Internet becomes more interwoven into our lives. The following chapters are included: (1) The Internet and the Google Age: Introduction (Jonathan D. James); (2) Patterns of Internet usage in the Philippines (Iremae D. Labucay); (3) The gendered search to connect: Females and social media in rural, Northern Ireland (Anne Rice); (4) Online religious advertising: The case of Australian Christian youth festivals (Paul Emerson Teusner); (5) The computer revolution and evangelical mission research and strategy: An historical overview (Michael Jaffarian); (6) Searching for French civilization: Reflections on situating information literacy skills in an undergraduate curriculum (Carmel O'Reilly); (7) Purposeful searching: Training students in Internet literacy for Italian studies (Etáin Watson); (8) Symbolic instruments and the Internet mediation of knowledge and expertise (Nicola F. Johnson); and (9) The Internet: Friend, foe or target? (Jonathan D. James). A name index is included.
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- 2014
23. Borrowing Latin American Materials in the Big Ten Academic Alliance: A Case Study for Consortial Data Analysis
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Thompson, Hilary H., Smith, Austin, Ostos, Manuel, and Gardinier, Lisa
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Inspired by the 2017 Big Ten Academic Alliance Library Conference's collective collection theme, the authors undertook a study to better understand the consortium's resource-sharing needs for Spanish and Portuguese materials published in Latin America. The authors employed multiple technologies to expedite gathering, reconciling, and analyzing data from different sources, making this project an excellent case study for consortial data analysis. In addition to presenting the methodology and key findings, the article encourages academic librarians to use resource-sharing data to inform cooperative collection development in area studies to build distinctive collections supporting consortial and national resource sharing.
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- 2019
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24. Advocating for Queer of Color Studies in German Graduate Programs
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Layne, Priscilla and Malakaj, Ervin
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This article advocates for the inclusion of queer and queer of color discourse into graduate curricula in North American German Studies. It presents a brief overview of major discussions in queer of color studies, proposes sample readings of queer of color texts in Germany that help graduate students develop sophisticated understandings of German cultural history in relation to the formation of globalization and nationalism discourses, and presents a sample syllabus on queer of color discourse and cultural history in Germany.
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- 2019
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25. Unpacking 'Heimat': A Spiraled Approach to Identity and Belonging for Global German Studies
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Peabody, Seth and Randall, Amanda
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If the German-speaking world is conceived of as a pluralistic society, open to migration, and integrated in global networks, then what could "Heimat" mean for German Studies? This article presents a rationale and curricular design model for critically unpacking the cultural narrative of "Heimat" within a globalized context. As numerous scholars have argued, "Heimat" is a complex, possibly untranslatable concept that expresses both belonging and exclusion. Its connection to nationalism, racism, and propaganda in German history is well known, and we argue that its most recent reemergence in public and political discourse presents pressing implications for German instruction. Given all of the cultural energies embedded into the concept, this article considers how we might reframe "Heimat" in our courses to build students' critical thinking skills and global perspectives. Through recent curriculum reform efforts in our undergraduate German program, we have implemented an iterative approach to critically probing the layered meanings of "Heimat" via multiple texts and avenues for student engagement at each level of the curriculum. By engaging the concept through a spiraling, content-driven design, students confront the implications of Heimat as an organizer of German identities and a discursive vehicle for achieving a more inclusive Germany and German Studies.
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- 2019
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26. Opening Our Imaginations: A Dialogue on Graduate Education
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Mittman, Elizabeth and Santos, Krsna
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Graduate education in the humanities struggles with weighty traditions, constrained (fiscal) resources, and a legacy of elitism and cultural homogeneity. As the makeup of graduate students becomes ever more diverse in terms of income, ethnicity, sexuality, citizenship, and disability, graduate programs are working through the challenges and opportunities non-traditional students bring to light. An openness to rethinking the mission of German Studies at Michigan State University (MSU) -- a large Midwestern, land-grant institution -- has made possible a series of specific changes, including the hybrid dissertation, faculty-student research collaboration, uniquely transdisciplinary approaches, and explicit preparation for non-academic career pathways. In this conversation, a professor and a doctoral student in the German Studies program at MSU reflect on these reforms in their program, and embed them within a broader framework of questions facing graduate education more generally: (1) the changing face of the discipline of German Studies, and indeed of German culture as an object of our study, (2) issues raised by the phenomenon of globalization and the emergence of Global Studies as an area of critical inquiry, and (3) the changing needs, knowledges, and aspirations of students today. We close with a call to embrace the promise of change.
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- 2019
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27. A Course in Canadian Film for U.S. Students
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Gutenko, Gregory
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Canadian Film will be a new course in the Communications Studies department at the University of Missouri at Kansas City particularly designed for non-Canadian Midwestern US students. It will not only introduce students to the richness and significance of Canadian film as both art and entertainment (which is virtually unrecognized around here), but it will also introduce them to Canada's cultural and socio-political nature and characters as revealed through film. Since much of what is Canadian is often distinguished by comparison and contrast to the American, this course will also throw into relief American film and students' own cultural experiences. To know Canada is to better know the United States. Course content includes the history and accomplishments of the National Film Board of Canada, US production in Canada since the late 1960s, the development of Hollywood North, French-Canadian film, IMAX and other cinematic innovations, and outstanding Canadian films and directors from both within and outside Canada. A course syllabus and schedule is available. To date Canadian Film has been offered through Independent Study and has been nominated for development as an online course.
- Published
- 2010
28. Response to Noah Sobe's 'Rethinking 'Cosmopolitanism' as an Analytic for the Comparative Study of Globalization and Education'
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Wisler, Andria
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As a springboard into her response inspired by Noah Sobe's article, this author offers two possibilities for what cosmopolitanisms can tell about comparative and international education research. First, from her perspective, rooted in justice and peace studies, she is intrigued by several authors' assessments of cosmopolitanism as a cognitive or reason-based framework. In other words, the cosmopolitan person will use reason to be autonomous, have self-responsibility, procure agency, plan life rationally, while respecting diversity and difference. She is not convinced that it is predominantly reason that drives the embodiment and enactment of a cosmopolitan mode of living. Second, and more directly in response to Sobe's article, the author is confident that cosmopolitanisms will continue to affect traditional methodological models of comparative education and other educational research that uphold a static version of the field site, such as a school or nation-state, as the primary unit of analysis, while discounting the movement of knowledge, identities, and people over campus and country borders. The author contends that Sobe's article offers a "who's who" of significant voices in the dialogue between cosmopolitanism and comparative education. His intention for citing such a cache of theorists and researchers is explicit--"to locate the present project in scholarly circles." More importantly, however, Sobe works to "loosen cosmopolitanism" from the possessive grip of Enlightenment philosophers and the underlying inference that cosmopolitanism is solely a Kantian project, when it can rather be understood and employed as a historical category across temporal and spatial perimeters. He then discusses the use of "vernacular cosmopolitanisms" for investigating two instances of the role of schooling in the production of the cosmopolitan child--the first in present day United States and the second in pre-World War II Yugoslavia. Sobe marks a visionary signpost at the beginning of a path for considering alternatives to traditional paradigms of area studies in light of globalization's bestowments of "multi-layered geographies" that circumvent standard notions of territorial cartography. Heeding the arrows forward, this author is inspired to balance Sobe's meta-relational view of cosmopolitanisms and comparative education with a more nuanced unpacking of two aspects of his article. Specifically, she extrapolates on how the work of Arjun Appadurai, whom Sobe quotes briefly, can concretely influence the creation of a new "world-generating optic" in a comparative education research project. The author does this in light of her research in post-Yugoslav countries, introducing readers to another "vernacular cosmopolitanism" from this region of the Balkans.
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- 2010
29. Academic Internationalism: U.S. Universities in Transition
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Social Science Research Council, Stevens, Mitchell L., and Miller-Idriss, Cynthia
- Abstract
Despite wide consensus among higher education leaders that U.S. universities are undergoing a process of "globalization," there is little agreement about just what globalization means, what propels it, or what intellectual, political, and ethical consequences it will bring for American higher education. There is little systematic empirical research on the range of things often described by the term globalization: the proliferation of satellite campuses and cooperative agreements between schools; the growing scale and complexity of student flows across national borders; the diffusion of institutional and curricular norms; and the "internationalization" of instructional programs, to name just a few. There is no clear social science research agenda or intellectual framework for assessing the globalization of U.S. higher education. This report describes a research project currently underway at the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) that places this predicament into historical and institutional context. Funded by multiple grants from the U.S. Department of Education International Research and Studies Program, the project is a mixed-methods study of how American universities currently organize research and instruction regarding several adjacent world regions: the Middle East, South Asia, Russia/Eurasia, and Central Asia. The project focuses on: (1) the relationship between area study programs and center; (2) the varied relationships that social science and humanities faculty have with area studies initiatives; (3) the role of language instruction generally, and specifically Title VI-funded language instruction, in the organization of university-based research and teaching; and (4) how the study of trans-regional and trans-disciplinary phenomena is accommodated within an academic infrastructure organized by region and discipline. Two consultation meetings with senior faculty and administrators from universities from across the United States at the SSRC headquarters in New York City on October 14 and 17, 2008. At each meeting attendees were provided with a broad introduction to the project's scope and design; a glimpse of empirical findings from preliminary analyses of the SSRC's data; and an overview of the theoretical equipment they are using to connect their findings with larger discussions about U.S. universities' international activities more generally. This report provides a brief summary of the initial project and the discussions of it in New York; outlines the benchmark insights that will inform SSRC's analysis going forward; and sketches their ambitions for the future of the project. The following are appended: (1) Overview of Project Methods, Research Design, & Data Collection; (2) Senior Project Staff; (3) Participants in the October 2008 Consultations; and (4) General Schedule of the 14 & 17 October Meetings. (Contains 3 footnotes.)
- Published
- 2009
30. Toward a Responsive Model for Educational Leadership in Rural Appalachia: Merging Theory and Practice (Sumario en Espanol)
- Author
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Johnson, Jerry, Shope, Shane, and Roush, John
- Abstract
This conceptual paper draws on varied academic disciplines to set forth a model of educational leadership grounded in social justice and responsive to the unique challenges and strengths of rural Appalachian schools and communities. Model development grew out of discussions between faculty and graduate students in an educational leadership doctoral program, spurring a dialogue that merged theory and practice through (1) critical readings of traditional leadership models and of alternative models that purport to better meet the needs of economically disadvantaged students and families, and (2) a close examination of practice in the professional lives of the authors, each of whom serves or has served as a school administrator in a rural Appalachian setting. Following a discussion of the leadership model, consideration is given to the implications for leadership preparation programs and practices. [The citation information shown on the attached PDF (v5 n2 Oct-Dec 2010) is incorrect, according to the information displayed on the provider site.]
- Published
- 2009
31. Multi-Dimensional Review of Panama. Volume 2: In-Depth Analysis and Recommendations
- Author
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Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France), Development Centre and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France), Development Centre
- Abstract
Panama has achieved socio-economic improvements in recent decades thanks to strong economic growth and consequent poverty reduction. Its growth model is characterised by a dual economy in which a small number of activities, including those related to the Canal and Special Economic Zones, have exhibited high productivity growth but limited job creation. Panama should now embark on a new reform agenda to become a sustainable and inclusive high-income country. This report urges greater productivity in sectors that contribute to job formalisation to reduce disparities in income and among regions. As developing these policies requires further resources, taxation system and private sector involvement through public-private partnerships should also be reinforced. Focusing on skills and jobs, regional development and development financing, the volume provides analysis and recommendations on three areas which are key for Panama. Following a foreword, the table of contents includes the following chapters: (1) Acronyms and Abbreviations; (2) Executive Summary; (3) Overview: Towards a Sustainable and Inclusive High Income Country; (4) Building Better Skills and Creating Formal jobs for all Panamanians; (5) Strengthening Regional Development Policy to Boost Inclusive Growth; and (6) Improving the Taxation System and Promoting Private Sector Involvement to Support Financing for Development. [For Volume 1, see ED586180.]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Enabling Disability Justice: Toward a Transformation of Latin American Studies
- Author
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Sicolo, Paola Silvana
- Abstract
As a graduate student in the Latin American Studies Program, my academic interests have taken me through an interdisciplinary journey mapped by a series of courses on race, class, gender, indigeneity, globalization, transnational migration, and the intersectionality of all these social formations. However, I was struck by the persistent absence of disability in all these courses. For the most part, research and theories about disability derive mainly from the global North. As a result, The links between disability and colonialism, imperialism, and globalization are rarely discussed from a Global South standpoint. By infusing a disability lens into the familiar frameworks that inform the existing scholarship on Latin American Studies, in this thesis, I examine cultural representations of disability in which figures of otherness have been manufactured within a Latin American context. There is compelling archival documentation to support the argument that disability was a critical tool of social othering and extermination of bodies deemed a threat to the social order throughout Latin America history. However, with the exception of a very limited number of published texts, this history has yet to be unearthed. My aim is to move the concept of disability to the forefront of analysis as a way to rethink the field of Latin American Studies. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2018
33. A Study of Four Federal Graduate Fellowship Programs: Education and Employment Outcomes
- Author
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Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development (ED), Policy and Program Studies Service, InfoUse, Kraus, Lewis E., Henke, Robin R., and Nevill, Stephanie
- Abstract
The Office of Postsecondary Education (OPE) in the U.S. Department of Education (ED) sponsors four graduate fellowship programs: the Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad (DDRA) fellowship program, the Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowship program, the Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need (GAANN) fellowship program, and the Jacob K. Javits fellowship program. This report describes the academic and employment outcomes as of 2006 of graduate students who received financial support through one of these four federal fellowship programs between 1997 and 1999. The programs vary significantly with respect to their goals, the number of fellowships supported, and the amount of funding dispersed. Despite their differences, however, all of these programs are intended to encourage academically talented students to become experts in fields important to the national interest. The study was conducted in two parts: an institution-level survey and a fellowship-level survey. Using contact information obtained through the institution survey or available from ED records, survey researchers located and invited 72 percent of the sample of 5,525 fellowships to participate in a Web-based survey. Despite differences among these four fellowship programs in purpose and implementation, there are noteworthy similarities in their outcomes (Table A). With respect to education outcomes, the majority of fellows in each of the four programs completed their degrees, with the percentage of degree completions ranging among programs from about two-thirds to nine-tenths of fellowships. Fellows who completed their degrees tended to do so in less time than graduate students overall. National surveys indicate that doctoral students who complete their degrees do so in seven to twelve years, depending on their field of study, with students in the humanities and social sciences taking more time than students in the natural sciences. With respect to employment outcomes, large proportions of students who received fellowships participated in the labor force after completing their fellowships, most commonly in work that was related to their fellowship-gained expertise and was part of a career they were pursuing. Although this report provides some national comparison data on graduate students' demographic and academic characteristics, degree completion, and time taken to complete a degree, it is important to realize that the students who receive these fellowships are highly qualified, high-achieving students, i.e., students who are probably more likely than the average graduate student to complete a degree or gain employment in their fields without the financial assistance and prestige effects of these fellowships. Students compete among their classmates, within institutions or across the nation, for these fellowships: students who win these competitions are superior students by definition. Without a true comparison group--i.e., students of similar qualifications who did not receive these fellowships--it is not possible to attribute these fellows' success to their receipt of the fellowships. Appended are: (1) Technical Notes and Methodology; (2) Survey Data Elements; and (3) Survey Instruments. (Contains 25 figures, 162 tables and 17 footnotes.)
- Published
- 2008
34. Developing Curriculum Materials on East Asia for Secondary School Students
- Author
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Menton, Linda K.
- Abstract
The Curriculum Research & Development Group (CRDG) is a research unit of the College of Education at the University of Hawai'i. Part of its mission is to develop curriculum materials for students in grades K-12. The social studies section of CRDG has been developing curriculum materials on Asia since the early 1990s. As part of a project entitled Curriculum on Asian and Pacific History, CRDG planned to develop a set of four interrelated but stand-alone books on China, Japan, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific. All of these instructional materials were designed to be used as flexibly as possible: to supplement the truncated information in world history texts; to be used as a primary text in an area studies course; and to use in related student activities such as Model United Nations or World Quest. As a result of its work on the China and Japan books, CRDG decided to follow up by developing a text on East Asia. The first step in developing instructional materials, regardless of their subject or format, is to develop a solid organizational framework. This article discusses the process of developing the organizational framework for a thematically based text focused on China, including Hong Kong and Taiwan; Japan; and South and North Korea. (Contains a Bibliography and 7 endnotes.)
- Published
- 2007
35. Comparatively Knowing: Making a Case for the Vertical Case Study
- Author
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Vavrus, Frances and Bartlett, Lesley
- Abstract
This article enters into contemporary debates regarding methodology and training in comparative and international education by addressing epistemological questions about "what" can be known of the world and how it can be known through comparative research. We contend that debates over qualitative versus quantitative methods or area studies versus cross-national studies miss the mark as they address only superficial differences in the field when much deeper divisions exist over the nature of comparative knowledge. Based on our view of comparative knowledge, we propose the vertical case study as a means of comparing knowledge claims among actors with different social locations in an attempt to situate local action and interpretation within a broader cultural, historical, and political investigation. We also put forth a program of study that would enable students of comparative and international education to conduct research promoting full and thorough knowledge of multiple levels of comparison within a single vertically-bounded case.
- Published
- 2006
36. Postcolonial Appalachia: Bhabha, Bakhtin, and Diane Gilliam Fisher's 'Kettle Bottom'
- Author
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Stevenson, Sheryl
- Abstract
Diane Gilliam Fisher's 2004 award-winning book of poems, "Kettle Bottom," offers students a revealing vantage point for seeing Appalachian regional culture in a postcolonial context. An artful and accessible poetic sequence that was selected as the 2005 summer reading for entering students at Smith College, "Kettle Bottom" enables diverse students to reconsider their notions of Appalachia, and of regional identities, while also gaining a better understanding of postcolonial theory. In particular, Fisher's poems provide vivid examples that make Homi Bhabha's approach to postcolonial analysis not only relevant to the students themselves, but revelatory. In this article, Sheryl Stevenson demonstrates how combining concepts such as Bhabha's notion of hybridity with Mikhail Bakhtin's views on hybridization, polyglossia, and heteroglossia, and linking them to Fisher's poems can make these concepts come alive for students. "Kettle Bottom" portrays compelling events and clashing cultures of the 1920-1921 mine wars that were focused in Mingo County, West Virginia, with mining deaths and anti-union violence eventually drawing 9,000 or more miners into an armed uprising that was only quelled by national forces (Shogun 208). To see how the poems and theoretical concepts illuminate each other, Stevenson considers three types of hybridity in "Kettle Bottom."
- Published
- 2006
37. Accountability, Assessment, and the Literacies of Information and Communication Technologies
- Author
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Asselin, Marlene, Early, Margaret, and Filipenko, Margot
- Abstract
In this article, we have explored the issues that Ministries of Education confront in their large-scale assessment policies and practices as literacy curricula expand to include the new literacies of information and communication technologies. Based on a series of interviews with Ministry personnel, we have described their current progress to include the new literacies, plans for the future, and the dilemmas and challenges in considering the demands of new times. We argue for a more balanced approach to assessment and accountability, one that recognizes the limitations of current public accountability measures and situates them within a broader assessment framework. (Contains 3 tables and 2 notes.)
- Published
- 2005
38. International Education and Foreign Language Studies in Higher Education. Field Hearing before the Subcommittee on Select Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Ninth Congress, First Session (April 22, 2005) Serial No. 109-10
- Author
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Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and the Workforce.
- Abstract
The purpose of this field hearing was for the members of the Subcommittee on Select Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce, to learn more about a variety of programs authorized and funded by Title VI. Continued Federal support for these programs reflects the significance and growing relevance of language and area studies, diplomacy, national security, and business competitiveness. International studies are a national priority and institutions of higher learning and higher education must be encouraged to be more responsive to this reality today. The reauthorization of Title VI presented the immediate opportunity to set an agenda for these programs as a strategic necessity that would appeal to congressional interest and congressional support. The Federal investment in these programs is significant which is why this Subcommittee needed to ensure that the programs are fulfilling the purpose for which they were originally created. Statements were offered by Subcommittee members: Honorable Ruben Hinojosa, Ranking Member; and Honorable Patrick J. Tiberi, Chairman, Subcommittee on Select Education, Committee on Education and the Workforce. Other statements were provided by: Dr. Stephen M. Hills, Academic Director, Office of International Programs, Fisher College of Business, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Dr. Jerry R. Ladman, Associate Provost, Office of International Affairs, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Donna Nesbitt, Executive Director, Center of Curriculum and Assessment, Ohio Department of Education, Columbus, Ohio; and Dr. Fernando Unzueta, Director, Center for Latin American Studies, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
- Published
- 2005
39. National Capital Language Resource Center: Who Is Paying the Bills? The Federal Budget and Foreign Language Education in U.S. Schools and Universities
- Author
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Keatley, Catharine
- Abstract
In this paper, the authors review all the Federal programs that support, at least partially, foreign language education for non-government language students, and they calculated the maximum amount that these programs spend on foreign language education. The Department of Education (ED) receives the most funding for these projects with total funding allocations for the ED in 2003 amounting to $62.9 billion. Yet in the same year, total funding for foreign language education in the ED budget was a maximum of $85,425,469, which constitutes 0.15% of the overall ED budget. In other words, for each $100 spent by the Department of Education in 2003, fifteen cents was spent on foreign language education. Monies from other federal departments and agencies that went to support foreign language education for non-government students were approximately $9.75 million in 2003. Together, the total federal expenditure on foreign language education for non-government students in 2003 was less than $95.2 million. This article explains how the estimated expenditure on foreign language education was determined. Also provided are brief descriptions of the federally-funded programs that support the teaching of foreign languages to non-government students. [This article was originally published by the National Capital Language Resource Center (NCLRC). Reprinted with permission from NCLRC.]
- Published
- 2004
40. An Elementary School Day in Germany.
- Author
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Fitzhugh, William P.
- Abstract
This lesson plan, focusing on an elementary school day in Germany, is intended for use at the elementary level (grades 2-5) and requires two 30-minute class periods for implementation. The lesson plan states objectives, addresses applicable National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) standards, lists materials required, presents a rationale, provides a three step procedure for classroom implementation, suggests evaluation activities, and provides resource sheets. It contains materials dealing with culture and with people, places, and environments. (BT)
- Published
- 2003
41. Discovering Germany: A Social Studies Unit for Elementary Students Using the Five Fundamental Themes of Geography.
- Author
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Fitzhugh, William P.
- Abstract
This social studies unit about discovering Germany is intended for use with elementary students. The unit states objectives; discusses strategies and evaluation; lists materials needed; addresses national social studies and geography standards; and cites the contents. It introduces the five fundamental themes of geography: (1) location, (2) place, (3) movement, (4) environment, and (5) region. Diverse activities are suggested for elaboration of the five themes. Includes 10 resource sheets. Lists activities using mental mapping, graphic organizers, and a Venn diagram. (BT)
- Published
- 2003
42. North Korea: A Geographical Analysis.
- Author
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Military Academy, West Point, NY. Dept. of Geography and Environmental Engineering., Palka, Eugene J., and Galgano, Francis A.
- Abstract
North Korea is a country about the size of the state of New York, inhabited by about 23 million people. It came into existence after the conclusion of World War II following decades of occupation of the Korean Peninsula by the Japanese empire. Dividing the peninsula into North and South Korea was the politically expedient solution to one of the many post-war political disagreements between the Allied powers, particularly the United States and the Soviet Union. This collection of articles is intended to be useful for anyone interested in learning more about North Korea, such as units with contingency missions to deploy to the peninsula. Chapters in the collection are: (1) "Introduction" (Eugene J. Palka); (2) "Location" (Eric D. Larkin); (3) "Geomorphology" (Matthew R. Sampson); (4) "Climatology" (Mark R. Read); (5) "Biogeography" (Peter G. Anderson); (6) "Historical Geography" (James B. Dalton); (7) "Cultural Geography" (Jon C. Malinowski); (8) "Political Geography" (William M. Reding); (9) "Population Geography" (Dennis D. Cowher); (10) "Urban Geography" (Brandon K. Herl); (11) "Economic Geography" (Albert A. Lahood); (12) "Medical Geography" (Patrick E. Mangin); (13) "Conclusion" (Francis A. Galgano); and "Bibliography" (Jeffery S. W. Gloede). (Contains numerous color figures/maps/tables and approximately 135 references.) (BT)
- Published
- 2003
43. National Interests and Global Security: The Case of Iraq. Occasional Papers.
- Author
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American Forum for Global Education, New York, NY., Arkin, Linda, Gherardi, Jen, and Levy, Tedd
- Abstract
Most global studies programs focus either on the study of geographical areas or on global issues that transcend national boundaries. Unfortunately, most U.S. social studies teachers were trained to teach U.S. history or western civilization and have little background in the concepts and issues of global and international education. Studies have shown that the average person does not understand international conflicts. This resource guide is intended to supplement 60-second sound bites and provide teachers and students with information about the U.S. conflict with Iraq. Its readings, maps, and other activities present multiple perspectives and have been designed to serve as springboards for discussion in the classroom. The guide begins with background information on Iraq, delineating geography, people, history, government, political conditions, economy, trade, agriculture, and foreign relations. It provides activities (Crisis with Iraq; What Is Propaganda?), readings, a map activity, student forum, 12 discussion questions, selected resources on Iraq, and an Iraq historical timeline. (BT)
- Published
- 2003
44. China: Tradition and Transformation Curriculum Projects. Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminars Abroad Program, 2001 (China).
- Author
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National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York, NY. and National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York, NY.
- Abstract
The curriculum projects in this collection represent the culmination of a Fulbright-Hays summer seminar for educators which took place in China in 2001. The collection contains 16 curriculum projects: "Notes on Giving a Presentation to a Parents Group, School Board or Other Public Audience Regarding Modern China" (David Bilka); "Teaching Methodologies of Exposing Students to the Chinese Culture in Elementary Education" (Sherry E. Carr); "A Comprehensive Study of China Prepared for World Cultures Students (10th Grade)" (Daniel Chittick); "Understanding Contemporary China, 1945-Present: An Instructional Unit for 10th Grade Global History" (Judith A. DuPre); "The Women of China: From Manchu to Mao to Modern" (Claire McCaffery Griffin); "Awaking China from Its Slumber: From Gunboat to Ping-Pong Diplomacy" (Dana N. Lynch); "From Golden Peaches to Golden Arches: Silk Roads Old and New" (Michael A. Marcus); "Integrating Media into China Studies" (Nancy Nemchik); "Chinese Trade Show" (Suzanne Otte); "Dancing with the Dragon: Exploring 20th Century China through Adeline Yen Mah's Memoir 'Falling Leaves'" (Valerie A. Person); "China: Paradise of Historians" (Adrienne J. Phillips); "Chinese History Unit from c. 2000 B.C.E. to 220 C.E.--9th Grade Two Week Unit" (Moneeka Settles); "Historical Investigation: Evidence of the First Emperor's Reign" (Marcie Taylor-Thoma); "Understanding the Chinese Cultural Revolution Using Episodes from 'Red Scarf Girl' by Ji-li Jiang" (Sharman Lange Vermeer); "China: A Country in Transition" (Gerry Waller); and "A Comparative Analysis of Five Major Chinese Cities" (Ann Wight). (BT)
- Published
- 2002
45. The Geography of Germany: Lessons for Teaching the Five Themes of Geography. Social Studies, Grades 9-12. Update 2002.
- Author
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Goethe House, New York, NY., Inter Nationes, Bonn (Germany)., Blankenship, Glen, and Tinkler, D. William
- Abstract
This instructional package, consisting of a text and 13 transparencies, is designed for high school classrooms. The five lessons in the instructional package relate to the "Five Themes of Geography" (Location, Place, Human-Environment Interaction, Movement, and Region) as promoted by the National Geographic Society. The lessons are designed to support the teaching of world geography and world history courses. Lesson topics are: (1) "Location of Germany on the Earth's Surface" (two lessons); (2) "Physical and Human Characteristics of Germany" (four lessons); (3) "Interaction of the German People and Their Environment" (four lessons); (4) "Cultural Diversity in Germany" (two lessons); and (5) "German Unification and Regional Changes" (seven lessons). Each topic states objectives; lists materials and resources; offers an overview; and provides maps and worksheets for student activities. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
46. Germany in Europe: Enduring Issues. Social Studies Grades 6-12. Update 2002.
- Author
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Goethe House, New York, NY., Inter Nationes, Bonn (Germany)., Blankenship, Glen, and Moffitt, Louisa
- Abstract
This instructional package, consisting of a text and 27 transparencies, is designed for the middle and secondary school classroom. The unit focuses on three topics: (1) "Germany in the European Union (EU)" (four lessons focusing on history of the EU, characteristics of member states, and EU governance); (2) "Economic Issues in Germany and the European Union" (three lessons focusing on the Euro, environmental policy, standard of living); and (3) "People of Germany and the European Union" (three lessons focusing on citizenship, nationalism, immigration, and the legacy of the Holocaust). Each lesson states an educational objective; lists materials and resources; offers an overview; and provides maps and activities. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
47. Overview of Germany: The Federal Republic and the Federal States. Social Studies, Grades 6-8. Update 2002.
- Author
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Goethe House, New York, NY., Inter Nationes, Bonn (Germany)., Blankenship, Glen, and Tinkler, D. William
- Abstract
This instructional package, consisting of a text and 15 transparencies, is designed for middle school classrooms. The four lessons in the package correlate to the study of world cultures (perspective taking and symbols), geography, and government. The materials in the package focus on national studies and state studies from a comparative United States/Germany approach. The four lessons are: (1) "Culture and Perspective Taking on the Federal Republic of Germany" (five activities); (2) "Unifying Traits in Both the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany" (six activities); (3) "German Governmental System" (five activities); and (4) "Geography of Germany" (six activities) Each lesson states educational objectives; lists materials and resources; offers background information; and provides the activities. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
48. Cultural Reflections: Work, Politics, and Daily Life in Germany. Social Studies Grades 9-12. Update 2002.
- Author
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Goethe House, New York, NY., Inter Nationes, Bonn (Germany)., Blankenship, Glen, and Tinkler, D. William
- Abstract
This instructional package, consisting of a text and 16 transparencies, is designed for the high school classroom. The three lessons in this instructional package are: (1) "The German Worker" (six activities); (2) "Government in Germany" (seven activities); and (3) "Culture and Daily Life in Germany" (six activities). Student activities focus on comparative economic systems, worker training and apprenticeship programs, structure of government (including case studies of the health care system and the federal budget), the role of the press in Germany, and leisure activities. Each lesson states educational objectives; lists materials and resources; provides background information; and presents activities. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
49. Communities and Regions in Germany, Social Studies Grades 3-4. Update 2002.
- Author
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Inter Nationes, Bonn (Germany). and Blankenship, Glen
- Abstract
This instructional package is targeted at students in grades 3 and 4. The package, presented to students as a travelogue, stresses basic map, globe, and geography skills, and presents case studies of communities (cities/towns/villages) across Germany. It contains three lessons: (1) "One Germany in Numbers: Size, Population and Landscape"; (2) "The German Landscape"; and (3) "Traveling through Germany". Lessons 1 and 2 provide students an opportunity to practice basic geography skills in a comparative Germany/United States context. Lesson 3 allows students to apply their knowledge to a visual tour of Germany. Each lesson begins with an outline for teaching which includes instructional objectives, a list of resource materials, and a sequenced list of procedures for implementing the lessons. All lessons contain worksheets. Appended is the Diary of My Travels through Germany slide/tape transcripts (Schleswig-Holstein, North Rhine-Westphalia, Bavaria, Saxony, Berlin, Mecklenburg-Pomerania). An audio tape accompanies the text materials. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
50. Malaysia/Singapore: Where Asian Cultures Meet. Participants' Papers. Fulbright-Hays Seminars Abroad Program, 2001 (Malaysia and Singapore).
- Author
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Malaysian-American Commission on Educational Exchange, Kuala Lumpur. and Malaysian-American Commission on Educational Exchange, Kuala Lumpur.
- Abstract
The general objective of the Fulbright-Hays Seminars Abroad Program is to help U.S. educators enhance their international understanding and increase their knowledge of the people and culture of other countries. This particular program offered participants an overview of life in Malaysia and Singapore through seminars and other activities. Participants' papers in this collection are: "You've Got Mail: Pen Pals from Malaysia" (N. Brangwin); "World Tour Malaysia" (J. Campe); "Malaysia Creative Connection" (Beverly Crow-Stromme); "Postcards from Malaysia" (M. Dahl); "Malaysia: Where East Meets West" (D. Godfrey); "Japanese Treatment of Prisoners of War during World War II" (L. Gunter); "Malaysian Animals and Their Rainforest Habitat" (A. La Tour); "Celebrate Malaysia: An Interdisciplinary Curriculum Unit" (A. Loughlin); "A Study of Sarawak and the Native People" (M. J. Morris); "Making Personal Connections to Create Global Understanding: Helping Young Children Build Relationships through the Use of Technology" (M. R. Patel); "Plants and Animals in the Malaysian Rain Forest" (B. Paul); "Malaysia and Singapore: Where Asian Cultures Meet" (C. Steinbacher); "The Role and Status of the English Language in Multiethnic/Multilingual Malaysia" (Y. St. Hill); "Dress and Body Adornment in Malaysia" (C. E. Warner); "Malaysia in Our Classroom: Activities" (M. Wong); and "People of the Cedar and People of the Hornbill: A Cross Cultural Comparison of Northwest Coastal Natives of Washington State, USA, and the Ibans of Sarawak, Malaysia" (J. Younkin). (BT)
- Published
- 2002
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