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2. The Multilayered Nature of 'Democratic Aspects' Leading to Equity: Considerations from Collaborative Activities between Schools and Communities in Japan and the United States
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Ayaka Nakano
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This paper examines how public education can ensure equity and diversity by clarifying the "democratic aspects" that can be captured through school-community collaborative activities in Japan and the U.S. As a result of comparison and analysis, it is indicated that in both Japan and the U.S., these activities are conducted in the context of streamlining educational administration. In addition, the participation in school management of diverse people such as local residents, parents, and children is promoted in order to grasp their needs and achieve deliberation on an equal footing. In contrast to Japan, however, these activities in the U.S. put importance on providing health and educational services to disadvantaged families and children. Furthermore, they aim to change not only schools but also communities. Therefore, this paper suggests that "democratic aspects" encompassed by collaborative activities have multiple layers: (1) "compensatory-type" (status-quo satisfaction -oriented democratic aspects), (2) "participatory-type" (deliberation-oriented democratic aspects), and (3) "transformative-type" (status-quo change-oriented democratic aspects). In order to guarantee equity of education that ensures fairness and inclusion to all children, this paper clarifies the importance of having both activities that distribute educational and welfare services on a curve to disadvantaged children and families (compensatory-type) and activities that involve children themselves in the practice, leading to the transformation and creation of the world (participatory and transformative type). The types of activities described above do not necessarily set the transformative-type as the ultimate goal. The three types interact together and pave the way toward a democratic and equitable education that is open to all and respects the voices of minorities.
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- 2024
3. Towards a Social Realist Framework for Analyzing Academic Advising in Global South Contexts
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Aneshree Nayager and Danie de Klerk
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Academic advising is a proven high-impact practice, shown to have the potential to help increase students' prospects of academic success, increase their sense of belonging and integration at their institution of higher learning, and provide unique insights into the lived realities and experiences of higher education students. For this reason, advising can be seen as a transformative activity within the student support space in South African higher education institutions. As a practice and profession, advising has existed in the Global North (GN) for decades. However, in South Africa -- a developing country in the Global South (GS) -- academic advising remains a nascent field. Consequently, the overarching ideas that inform academic advising in the South African context (both theoretically and practically), tend to be drawn predominantly from the GN and more developed countries. The unchallenged acceptance and tacit dominance of theoretical perspectives and practices from these countries can be considered problematic. This is largely due to differences in the socioeconomic, cultural, and historical contexts of students attending university in GS countries like South Africa. This paper works towards developing a conceptual framework, informed by social realism, for analysing academic advising in GS contexts. It is the anticipated value of a GS framework for analysing the emergence of academic advising in South African and similar contexts that is the core contribution of the paper.
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- 2024
4. Confessions of Racism in Anti-Racist Education: Political, Affective and Pedagogical Concerns
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Michalinos Zembylas
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This theoretical paper proposes to expand our understanding of 'confessions of racism' in the context of anti-racist education through the lens of 'affective governmentality'. Confessions of racism are admissions of racism or declarations of privilege that foreground self-criticism and self-purification. The notion of affective governmentality turns attention to how confessions of racism function to normalize psychologized, individualized and depoliticized understandings of racism. Rather than outrightly dismissing confessions of racism though, given their probable persistence in popular and education discourses, an attempt is made here to re-frame them in order to highlight structural racism and inspire transformative action. It is argued that this re-framing could provide students and educators engaged in anti-racist education with a more effective path ahead. The paper concludes by suggesting that confessions of racism are used pedagogically in the classroom to revitalize attention to structural racism and transformative action rather than to foreground self-criticism and self-purification.
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- 2024
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5. The Epistemological Chain: A Tool to Guide TNE Development
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David Grecic
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Transnational Education (TNE) has been a growing area of university business with a range of models developed to provide high quality educational products to partners across the world. However, given the changing geo-political environment, the continued rationale, efficacy, and legitimacy of current TNE partnership templates must be questioned. This paper therefore presents an alternative conceptualization to drive future work in this area, one which prioritizes the place of knowledge and transformational learning. I propose a new learning-based framework, the Epistemological Chain (EC), and describe how this can guide future TNE interactions and establish an alternative paradigm based upon cooperation and the co-creation of learning. Exemplars are provided that illustrate the extremes of the framework. The EC's future utility and application are then discussed with regard to TNE partnership design, operation, and evaluation. In summary the paper provides an original framework that places education firmly back at the heart of TNE.
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- 2024
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6. Imagining Advancement of Wilding Educational Policy: Reflections and Possibilities in Botswana
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Yaone Duduetsang Matsagopane
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This paper examines the notion of wilding pedagogy and its potential for comprehensive transformation through educational policy. This paper argues that given current unsustainable human practices, significant changes can be achieved by aligning education and policy. This paper begins by defining wilding pedagogies and providing an overview of Botswana's background and prospects. It contends that Botswana has the potential to enhance the quality of education by promoting active and transformative learning experiences. Furthermore, this policy can lead to improved academic performance by acknowledging cultural linkages, honouring land, returning to a holistic approach aligned with the principles of the wild in education.
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- 2024
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7. 'English is Like a Credit Card': The Workings of Neoliberal Governmentality in English Learning in Pakistan
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Syed Abdul Manan
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Employing neoliberal governmentality as a conceptual frame, this paper presents evidence from the mushrooming English language academies from Pakistan to demonstrate that how neoliberal rationality as a normative order of reason governs the minds of learners and teachers without governing. Drawing on the analysis of an open-ended interview protocol and semi-structured interviews, the findings suggest that learning more English is believed to render them competitive in the current linguistic market. The rationality is deeply interwoven with the logic of the market. English is considered instrumental for social survival, a tool that promises all forms of social, cultural, and economic capital. The paper discusses that how the knowledge that neoliberal rationality internalises, apparently governs participants' discourses, actions, and their self-technologies. Self-technologies manifest in their conduct of relentless self-development and self-entrepreneurship. Recurrent neoliberal lexicon embodies their subjectivities. The power of neoliberalism 'inserts itself into their actions and attitudes, their discourses, learning processes and everyday lives' (Foucault [1980]. "Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings", 1972-1977. New York: Pantheon Books). The study concludes that the transformative potential and promises attached to English learning are facile because English does not exist in some neutral social space; instead, it operates in a polarised society where the roots of socioeconomic inequalities are fundamentally structural than access to English.
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- 2024
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8. Experiencing (Dis)Comforting Pedagogies: Learning Critical Geography beyond the Here and Now
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John Clayton, Paul Griffin, and Graham Mowl
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In this paper we reflect on our experiences teaching human geography across two modules that pedagogically centre student reflexivity through content that has potential to be dis-comforting. Drawing upon student experiences on two final year option modules, relating to social and spatial exclusion and "race", ethnicity and multiculture, we reflect on how learning experiences on these modules "stay with" students in ways that are potentially transformative. The paper draws upon our own reflections as teachers, alongside anonymous student work and crucially the student voice, through a questionnaire distributed to previous graduates. Foregrounding the student voice is a key contribution here, whereby we assess student relationships with taught content beyond their studies. Bringing this data together, we draw upon border pedagogy to suggest that discomfort is integral to a transformative approach, but how scaffolding is necessary to enable such learning experiences. We also acknowledge, though, that such learning experiences are not experienced equally and there are limits to such approaches, particularly within contemporary higher education institutions.
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- 2024
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9. Prompting Change: Exploring Prompt Engineering in Large Language Model AI and Its Potential to Transform Education
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William Cain
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This paper explores the transformative potential of Large Language Models Artificial Intelligence (LLM AI) in educational contexts, particularly focusing on the innovative practice of prompt engineering. Prompt engineering, characterized by three essential components of content knowledge, critical thinking, and iterative design, emerges as a key mechanism to access the transformative capabilities of LLM AI in the learning process. This paper charts the evolving trajectory of LLM AI as a tool poised to reshape educational practices and assumptions. In particular, this paper breaks down the potential of prompt engineering practices to enhance learning by fostering personalized, engaging, and equitable educational experiences. The paper underscores how the natural language capabilities of LLM AI tools can help students and educators transition from passive recipients to active co-creators of their learning experiences. Critical thinking skills, particularly information literacy, media literacy, and digital citizenship, are identified as crucial for using LLM AI tools effectively and responsibly. Looking forward, the paper advocates for continued research to validate the benefits of prompt engineering practices across diverse learning contexts while simultaneously promoting potential defects, biases, and ethical concerns related to LLM AI use in education. It calls upon practitioners to explore and train educational stakeholders in best practices around prompt engineering for LLM AI, fostering progress towards a more engaging and equitable educational future.
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- 2024
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10. Theoretical Foundations of Culturally Responsive Teaching and Connections to Saskatchewan Curriculum and Indigenous Education
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Jessica K. Madiratta
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This paper examines the attributes of culturally responsive teaching (CRT) as well as its theoretical foundations. Gay's (2018) work describes the eight attributes of CRT as validating, comprehensive and inclusive, multidimensional, empowering, transformative, emancipatory, humanistic, and normative and ethical. After unpacking each attribute, I present and discuss four dimensions of Gay's (2018) theoretical foundations of CRT which include culturally diverse curriculum, teacher caring, home and school connection, and academic achievement. Further, I write about how CRT and the epistemologies of Indigenous education can lead to healthy and transformative spaces for Indigenous students in Saskatchewan public schools. For the purposes of this paper, I define healthy and transformative spaces as spaces where students have their needs met in the four dimensions of spirit, mental, physical, and emotional health.
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- 2024
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11. Real-World Experiments as a Teaching and Learning Approach for Sustainable Consumption Education
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Anja Lisa Hirscher, Samira Iran, Ulf Schrader, and Martin Müller
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Purpose: This paper aims to propose and evaluate an innovative approach to education for sustainable consumption (ESC) which empowers teenagers and young adults to improve sustainable consumption competences. This approach combines pedagogical learning approaches such as real-world learning (e.g. experiential learning and research-based learning) with transformative and transdisciplinary research approaches (i.e. real-world laboratory research). Design/methodology/approach: Through a transdisciplinary research design, the authors explore if real-world experiments (RWEs) offer a suitable approach for sustainable consumption education at schools. RWEs are a research approach for knowledge production, aiming to go beyond temporary interventions, to establish semi-permanent spaces for sustainability transformation and reflexive learning. To evaluate this proposal, the authors study already existing active teaching and learning approaches developed within and for ESC and put these in perspective, to define and understand the RWEs. Findings: Insights from a transdisciplinary research project which applied RWEs as a teaching and learning approach in German schools complement conceptual considerations. As a result, advantages, such as the development of core competencies among learners, but also challenges experienced, are illustrated. Though, the challenges found are not unique to the RWE, rather they point out important potentials for ESC through suggesting systematic changes in educational institutions and teaching approaches. Originality/value: This paper explores RWEs as an active and participatory teaching and learning approach for sustainable consumption education at schools and delivers practical insights and a definition of RWEs as an innovative teaching and learning approach.
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- 2024
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12. Bringing Educational Development to Central and Eastern Europe: Reflections on Twenty Years of Supporting Teachers
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Gabriela Pleschová
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This paper discusses a sustained effort to introduce and make richer educational development opportunities for colleagues in Slovakia: a community that has common experiences, needs, expectations, access to opportunity and social interactions that follow mutual interest. In this paper, I reflect on the challenges and lessons learnt over two decades while I worked with teachers, educational developers and students taking a community-based, transformation-oriented, and needs-based approach. Over time, this resulted in expanding the community and offering it a broader range of services. The article concludes with four recommendations for those taking community-based approach, including cultivating trust and nurturing hope within the community.
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- 2024
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13. Knowing, Doing, and Becoming Reflective Practitioners: A Narrative Inquiry of STEAM Educators
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Pushpa Kumari Sunar, Binod Prasad Pant, and Niroj Dahal
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Reflective practice can guide educators toward enhancing their abilities, comprehension, and expertise, reflecting on their experiences to grow personally, professionally, and academically, thereby elevating the overall standard of their work. This paper aims to narrate the perception, practice, challenges, opportunities, and outcomes of reflective practices among STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Math) educators in Nepal. Using narrative inquiry, we explored the reflective practice experiences of four STEAM educators, (three female and one male). Interview guidelines were used as a data collection tool to generate the participants' narratives. The guiding theoretical referents for this study were Dewey's theory of experience and Mezirow's transformative learning theory. The findings of this study show that STEAM educators perceived reflective practice as a tool to reflect on their actions, evaluate them, and learn from their experiences. Participants emphasized that teaching is a dynamic job with many challenges; however, reflective practices helped them realize their weaknesses and refine their efforts to create a better learning environment. It also enabled them to shift from traditional pedagogical practices to progressive ones, where learners were empowered through authentic and meaningful engagement in the learning process. Time management was seen as a significant challenge when practicing reflective practices; sometimes, the ego clash demotivated them to reflect on their actions. Despite challenges, participants also accepted that reflective practices allow them to explore and apply new ideas in their profession and transform their practices. Consequently, the perspectives offered in this paper may prove beneficial for other educators in cultivating reflective practitioners.
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- 2024
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14. Collaborative Aesthetic Experiences and Teacher Learners: Arts-Practice Research in a Teacher Education Classroom
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Theresa Catalano, Inoussa Malgoubri, Jennifer Bockerman, Hector Palala Martinez, Mackayla Kelsey, Leonardo Brandolini, and Ilia Shcherbakov
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This paper explores the experiences of six teacher learners and one teacher educator in a graduate course on aesthetic education at a Midwestern university in the U.S. Using collective autoethnography and arts-practice research, the researcher/participants examine how aesthetic experiences were activated in the learning environment and how this activation supported the development of transformational rethinking that led to the changing of formed habits of teaching. Findings reveal how aesthetic teacher education can be therapeutic, aid in building connections between the teacher and students (and among students), inspire wonder and discovery, facilitate the valuing and including of cultural and linguistic backgrounds of students, compel new perspectives, and promote attunement to process.
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- 2024
15. Multimodal Literacy in a New Era of Educational Technology: Comparing Points of View in Animations of Children's and Adult Literature
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Len Unsworth
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Purpose: The paper shows the interpretive impact of different constructions of the point of view available to the reader/viewer in book and animated movie versions of a children's picture book, a novel for pre-adolescents/early teenagers, and a graphic novel for adolescents and adults. Design/Approach/Methods: Excerpts from book and animated movie versions of the same story are compared using multimodal analysis of interpersonal meaning to show how the reader/viewer is positioned in relation to the characters in each version, complemented by analyses of ideational meaning to show the effect of point of view on interpretive possibilities. Findings: Focusing mainly on multimodal construction of point of view, the analyses show how interpretive possibilities of ostensibly the same story are significantly reconfigured in animated adaptations compared with book versions even when the verbal narrative remains substantially unchanged. Originality/Value: The study shows that it is crucial to students' critical appreciation of, and their creative contribution to, their evolving digital literary culture that in this new era of educational technology, attention in literacy and literary education focuses on developing understandings of digital multimodal narrative art, and that animated movie adaptations are not presented pedagogically as isomorphic with, or simply adjunct to, corresponding book versions.
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- 2024
16. A conceptual framework for practicing inclusive dialogic organization development in times of uncertainty and complexity
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Kwon, Chang-kyu and Kwon, Kibum
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- 2024
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17. The Seven-Step Learning Journey: A Learning Cycle Supporting Design, Facilitation, and Assessment of Transformative Learning
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Annick De Witt, Margien Bootsma, Brian J. Dermody, and Karin Rebel
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In a world in need of profound change, the importance of "transformative education" is increasingly recognized. However, barriers abound in our Higher Education Institutions, including that educators often have little notion of "how" to make their teaching more transformative "in practice." This paper builds on our experience of developing a transformative learning intervention in the context of our sustainability education at Utrecht University. For this project, we designed a learning cycle consisting of seven steps, summarized as "excavate," "absorb," "experience," "observe," "deepen," "exchange," and "consolidate." We tested this seven-step learning journey in two Bachelor courses, using qualitative student evaluations (n = 305), and then substantiated it by drawing on the learning sciences literature. We conclude this cycle can help educators structure their teaching; include reflective, experiential, and interactive learning methodologies; and invite learners to systematically reflect on their change in meaning making, thereby supporting (transformative) education design in different contexts.
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- 2024
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18. Do we really make a difference? A case study on the value of taught environmental sustainability postgraduate programmes within geography
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Rodway-Dyer, Sue and Barr, Stewart
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- 2024
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19. Future-Readiness and Its Educational Implications: A Daoist Interpretation
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Charlene Tan
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This paper explores the extent to which our past and present knowledge can help us to be future-ready, and suggests a theoretical basis for future-readiness. Drawing on the thought of the Daoist philosopher Zhuangzi, it is argued that future-readiness is primarily about having an open and flexible mindset where one responds appropriately to emerging realities and challenges. Two salient key Daoist principles that underpin the notion of future-readiness are 'walking two roads' ("liang xing") and 'rightness of the present this' ("yin shi"). The former is about going beyond "shi/fei" distinctions -- 'this/right' versus 'not-this/wrong' -- to consider and harmonise alternatives to achieve the best possible outcome. The principle of 'rightness of the present this' refers to making the most appropriate response based on situational constraints. The major educational implications are a rejection of limiting teaching and learning to skills-centred education; an emphasis on unlearning; and the promotion of self-transformative education.
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- 2024
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20. Cultivating Criticality in a Neoliberal System: A Case Study of an English Literature Curriculum at a Mega Distance University
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Retha Knoetze
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Neoliberal practices such as managerialism and academic casualisation impact higher education systems globally. While these practices can constrain any curriculum aimed at enabling transformative learning, this paper shows that they place particular limitations on arts and humanities curricula intent on cultivating criticality and a sense of social responsibility. I draw on data from an English literature curriculum study at a mega distance education institution in South Africa and use Legitimation Code Theory to take a close-up look at how two neoliberal practices: managerialism and academic casualisation cause misalignments between the underpinning values of the curriculum and the kinds of pedagogic and formative assessment practices that are employed. I conclude that decisions regarding administration, enrolments and staffing based on neoliberal values can frustrate students' epistemological and ontological access to humanities disciplines and limit the potential of humanities curricula to offer a higher education in service of the social good.
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- 2024
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21. Shame and Adult Learners
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Lisa Modenos
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In this paper, I explore the ways that educators can nurture transformative learning for adult students by engaging emotions, particularly shame. I discuss how shame mitigates adult student experiences, successes, and failures in higher education, and how a relational pedagogy of vulnerability can support adult learners. This approach not only helps adult learners but reifies liberatory education for students and teachers alike, challenging hegemonic norms in higher education that often limit and exclude adult learners.
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- 2024
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22. Virtual Transborder Service Learning as a Transformative Educational Pedagogy: A California, USA - Baja California, Mexico Academic Partnership in Sustainable Tourism
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Katie Dudley, Vinod Sasidharan, Marisa Reyes-Orta, and Jose T. Olague
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Service learning (SL) engages students in intentional, collaborative service experiences that promote civic citizenship. The COVID-19 pandemic forced traditional face-to-face SL courses to transition into virtual service learning (e-SL). This paper examines the academic and civic outcomes of an e-SL binational sustainable tourism course for undergraduate students. The course was designed to deliver disciplinary knowledge in sustainable tourism and transborder civic citizenship competencies in the following areas: 1) Ethos, 2) Literacy, 3) Inquiry, 4) Action, 5) Leadership, and 6) Partnership. A post-course student survey was deployed to assess student perspectives regarding the achievement of course outcomes. The findings revealed significant (positive) academic and civic transformations among the students due to the intentionality of the e-SL course design and implementation. Results indicate that e-SL in sustainable tourism education can be an effective pedagogy for inculcating civic learning, responsibility, and engagement among students and future professionals in the field of tourism.
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- 2024
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23. A Regenerative Decolonization Perspective on ESD from Latin America
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Thomas Macintyre, Daniele Tubino de Souza, and Arjen Evert Jan Wals
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This paper provides a Latin American perspective on ESD, with a focus on transformative and participatory learning in community contexts. With a long history of critical pedagogies, Latin America provides a fertile ground for exploring alternative forms of education as a means to address deep-rooted challenges in western traditional strands of education. We start by providing an overview of pertinent educational currents present in Latin America, then ground these perspectives in two case studies carried out by the authors -- one from Colombia, the other from Brazil -- which explore grassroots initiatives in community settings that utilise different forms of education and learning. We then propose an integrative model to foster alternative educational approaches that might lead to decolonial and regenerative praxis, finishing with a discussion on how Latin American-rooted regenerative decolonisation perspective and praxis can inform global ESD discourses.
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- 2024
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24. 'Dialogue within' and 'Dialogue between': A Duoethnography of Two Researchers in the Field of North Korean Refugee Education
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Shin Ji Kang and Eun-Young Jang
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The purpose of this paper is to document dialogic reflections of two researchers (Shin Ji and Eun-Young) who had conducted collaborative projects on education for youth with North Korean refugee backgrounds. By employing duoethnography, conversations were conducted on the following questions: What are the experiences that impacted our researcher identities? What is the transformative learning emerged from our engagement in NK research? How do we become more holistic researchers through duoethnography? During a series of facilitated dialogues both "within" and "between" Shin Ji and Eun-Young, they learned that their personal experiences of marginalisation served as an experiential and emotional foundation for their increased critical awareness of North Korean refugee students: the disparities in position, power and access that the students experienced in the process of resettlement in South Korea. Participating in the duoethnography, the authors also experienced qualitative transformation as they made sense of the ways their identities and NK research were feeding each other. The authors thus concluded that the duoethnography created a third space for them in that it was a personally therapeutic and professionally productive engagement that was able to secure transparency that represents unique insights from each researcher.
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- 2024
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25. Learning by Doing Migration: Temporal Dimensions of Life Course Transitions
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Michael Bernhard
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The increasing speed of societal, environmental, technological, and workplace changes brings into sharper focus the question of how people shape and learn from transitions, such as so-called 'skilled migration'. Taking a doing transitions and doing migration perspective, I assert that transitions and migration do not simply exist but are constituted relationally through social practices and accompanied by learning processes. This paper reports findings from qualitative research into the question of how people learn and transform their understandings of (life)time when moving to a new country and seeking entry into the labour market. The study used the documentary method to analyse data from 20 biographical-narrative interviews with people who moved to Canada as adults. Findings indicate different modes of dealing with shifts in temporal contexts during migration as decompressing lifetime, losing time, and going with the flow. These modes are associated with positive transformative learning, negative transformative learning, and learning through participation in practices. This study has implications for theorising learning during life course transitions as a socially embedded process. It also points to the need for differentiated support as individuals seek to enter new labour markets or make career changes in the context of migration.
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- 2024
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26. Epistemic (In)Justice in English Medium Instruction: Transnational Teachers' and Students' Negotiation of Knowledge Participation through Translanguaging
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Yongyan Zheng and Yixi Qiu
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Informed by a combined framework of 'translanguaging' and 'epistemic injustice', this paper examines how a group of teachers and students from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds negotiated their knowledge participation through translanguaging in an English medium instruction (EMI) degree program at a Chinese university. Data were collected over a 12-month classroom ethnography, including lesson recordings, stimulated recalls, and reflexive journals. A thematic analysis of the data reveals that transnational teachers and students actively employed translanguaging to challenge the prevailing hegemony of Western thinking and knowing in the EMI environment. We identified three key translanguaging capacities that facilitated transformative knowledge negotiation: (1) counteracting testimonial injustice; (2) providing hermeneutical resources; and (3) enhancing the sensitivity of trans-epistemic practices. Our study attests to the value of translanguaging as a transformative strategy to generate epistemic access for transnational students engaged in EMI learning, informing efforts to foster educational equity in the internationalization of higher education and to empower transnational teachers and students to reclaim their epistemic contribution capacities in the EMI context.
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- 2024
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27. Assessing Academics' COVID-19-Induced Emergency Remote Teaching Experiences Using Transformative Learning Theory
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Kumbirai Mabwe, Edward T. Chiyaka, and Alec Sithole
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Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, several educational institutions were thrust into a forced culture change as learning, teaching, and assessment moved from traditional face-to-face (F2F) instruction to remote delivery with a profound effect on pedagogy. This paper uses transformative learning theory to explore various aspects of academics' transition from face-to-face to remote teaching. Findings from an online cross-sectional survey of academics in higher education institutions (n = 95) indicate that academics were confronted with a disorienting dilemma that challenged previously unquestioned teaching experiences, beliefs, and values upon transition to remote teaching. This was followed by reflection, adoption, and implementation of different modes of instructional delivery. The results indicate statistically significant differences in critical reflection, openness, and teaching differently based on race. As higher education institutions transition to a "new" phase of instructional delivery, re-thinking professional development and support for the transformed academic in a new operating environment that remains prone to disruptive events becomes imperative.
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- 2024
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28. 'Weaving Tales of Resilience': Cyborg Composing with AI
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Ruth Li
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Purpose: This paper aims to offer an approach to cyborg composing with artificial intelligence (AI). The author posits that the hybridity of the cyborg, which amalgamates human and artificial elements, invites a cascade of creative and emancipatory possibilities. The author critically examines the biases embedded in AI systems while gesturing toward the generative potential of AI-human entanglements. Drawing on Bakhtinian theories of dialogism, the author contends that crafting found poetry with AI could inspire writers to problematize the ideologies embedded into the corpus while teasing apart its elisions or contradictions, sparking new forms of expression at the interface of the organic and the artificial. Design/methodology/approach: To illustrate this approach to human-AI composing, the author shares a found poem that she wrote using ChatGPT alongside her reflection on the poem. The author reflects on her positionality as well as the positionality of her artificial interlocutor, interrogating the notion of subjectivity in relation to Bakhtinian dialogism and multivocality. Findings: Weaving tales of resilience in harmony or tension with AI could unravel threads of possibility as human writers enrich, deepen or complicate AI-generated texts. By composing with AI, writers can resist closure, infiltrate illusions of objectivity and "speak back" to AI and the dominant voices replicated in its systems. Originality/value: By encouraging students to critically engage with, question and complicate AI-generated texts, one can open avenues for alternative ways of thinking and writing, inspiring students to imagine and compose speculative futures. Ultimately, in animating assemblages of the organic and the artificial, one can invite transformative possibilities of being and becoming.
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- 2024
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29. Self, Other and Transformative Learning: Pre-Service Teachers' Knowing in a Culture-Writing Course at a Chinese University
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Daisy Binfang Wu
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This article presents an ethnographic case study of pre-service teachers' transformative learning in a Culture-Writing course at a Chinese university. In recounting three stories with fieldwork data gleaned from moments of students' pre-class discussions, reflective writings, and reports on term-paper projects, this study showcases how a group of student-teachers transformed "the self" through getting to know and/or re-understanding "other(s)." Learning to 'write culture', as their teacher led them to see, is to appreciate the lifeworlds of others and further to destabilise taken-for-granted assumptions, beliefs, and understandings, thereby leading towards transformation. I argue that transformative learning takes place in the process of knowing and rebuilding the self in relationships with other(s). It constitutes moments of critical shift that place the self and identity in a more reflexive, relational, and reversible position within specific socio-cultural contexts. This study contributes to the ongoing discussions on transformative education by illuminating how other(s) play a role in promoting pre-service teachers' transformation in a classroom-based course.
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- 2024
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30. Conceptualising Transformative Language Teaching for Sustainability and Why It Is Needed
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Minna Maijala, Niklas Gericke, Salla-Riikka Kuusalu, Leena Maria Heikkola, Maarit Mutta, Katja Mäntylä, and Judi Rose
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This paper defines transformative language teaching for sustainability (TLS) and shows how contemporary, learner-oriented language teaching can foster important competencies and skills needed to reach the goals of education for sustainable development (ESD). The main aim of our approach is to integrate transformation-oriented ESD into language teaching in a way that considers and utilises the special features of language teaching and learning. We discuss the substantial possibilities that language education offers to ESD and propose a transformation-oriented ESD framework as the foundation for TLS, covering the linguistic and cultural features of sustainability that are central to language teaching and learning. Finally, we outline the pedagogical implications for TLS related to subject matter content and methods, that is, how language teachers can use learner-oriented language teaching methods to integrate ESD in their lessons. We propose a theory-based interdisciplinary model for the implementation of TLS in language education and language teacher education.
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- 2024
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31. How Might IB Classroom Pedagogy 'Make a Better World?' (Toward) Illuminating a Promising IBDP Teacher Praxis
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John Lyons and Paul Tarc
- Abstract
Moving beyond both a neoliberal as well as a 'heroic' conception of how the International Baccalaureate (IB) might 'make a better world', this paper focuses on the transformative potentiality of IBDP classroom pedagogy from the perspective of an experienced and critically minded educator, whose praxis has evolved across more than three decades of teaching IBDP courses in elite, well-established international schools around the world. In the IBDP teacher's account, particular attention is placed on the relational qualities of the (ideal) classroom culture and on the tensions between learner autonomy, teacher and learner authenticity and the critical imperative to interrogate privilege. We seek to provide a generative case for researchers and educators to reflect and find greater precision on the desired ends, possibilities and limits of critical and progressive pedagogies in school classrooms under contemporary conditions constituting our 'world in trouble'. More specifically for stakeholders of the IBDP, we offer up a promising orientation to IBDP classroom pedagogy in pursuit of the IB mission.
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- 2024
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32. To Have or to Be - Reimagining the Focus of Education for Sustainable Development
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Qudsia Kalsoom
- Abstract
Three decades ago, the term Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) entered educational discourse. However, it is important to note that the concept of "ESD" did not emerge from scholarly debates on education, rather as a tool to carry forward the agenda of sustainable development. As a result, it has been conceptualized in many different ways. This article is an attempt to further the debate on ESD-conceptualization. The paper discusses connections between constructivism, transformative learning, and Erich Fromm's idea of "to be" and argues that the focus of ESD needs to change from narrow behavioural outcomes to emancipating learners to ask critical questions, decide (without the influence of anonymous authority of capitalism) and engage in activities that allows them to develop an authentic relationship with their world. The article suggests that consistent opportunities (inside and outside the classroom) to reflect and question the "having" mode and taking steps towards "being" mode will address the problem of "otherness" and contribute towards a more sustainable world.
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- 2024
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33. Physical Health Education Preservice Teachers' Experiences with Autobiographical Narrative Inquiry and Transformative Pedagogies
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Lauren C. Hennig, Lee Schaefer, Andrew Bennie, and Douglas Gleddie
- Abstract
Background: Issues of social justice require the understanding and intervention of teachers across all subject areas. Teachers must be positioned to uphold fairness for all individuals in their classes while considering the disparities of wealth, opportunities, and social privileges that may impact the student experience. This paper explores the challenges and benefits of choosing transformative teaching methods when preparing preservice teachers to adopt socially just teaching practices. In the study, the experiences of four student participants, shared through autobiographical narrative inquiry, help us to better understand how transformative teaching modalities might best be applied in the Physical and Health Education Teacher Education (PHETE) context to assist student understanding of, and engagement with, social justice concepts. Study aims: The purpose of the study was to (1) better understand how PHETE students experienced transformative teaching methods in the post-secondary classroom, and (2) learn about student tensions, challenges, and successes felt whilst learning through this novel approach. Methods: The study uses narrative inquiry methodology to engage with the individual and shared experiences of participants. Drawing on four preservice teachers' narratives, our study brought to life the struggles PHETE educators and students face in confronting the hardwired 'rules of school' in university contexts. Results: Strong theoretical underpinnings for our methods did not entirely liberate students from their institutional understanding of learning and achievement. However, students did show greater critical awareness once they felt acknowledged as having individual agency. Conclusion: Our findings expose the shift in student perceptions of PHETE instruction to appreciate more reflexive methods and transformative pedagogies. They signal opportunities for larger institutional shifts, like removing rigid assessment structures which undermine the theories we're implementing.
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- 2024
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34. The Power of Trust and Relationship in the Implementation of Family Support Services: Learning from the Reaching Out, Supporting Families Programme
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Melanie Stone
- Abstract
Implementation is the carrying out of planned, intentional activities that aim to turn evidence and ideas into policies and practices that work for people in the real world--the "how" as well as the "what" (Centre for Effective Services, 2022). Whilst partnership, relationship and trust often feature in implementation, until relatively recently it has been neglected in the research and literature. This paper focuses on the overarching learning on the role of trust and relationships drawn from a large-scale evaluation of the implementation of family support services by 36 organisations in Northern Ireland. Trust and relationships were found to be important enablers of change for services and families alike. Specific behaviours were identified that contributed to the building of trusted relationships, which, in turn, created the conditions for change to happen. This learning develops emerging work on trust among stakeholders, applying it to engagement with families as integral to the implementation of effective family support services.
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- 2024
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35. Beyond an Anthropocentric View of Praxis: Towards Education for Planetary Well-Being
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Hannu L. T. Heikkinen, Rauno Huttunen, Kathleen Mahon, and Stephen Kemmis
- Abstract
A number of philosophical perspectives, such as deep ecology, posthumanism, and new materialisms, to name a few, have challenged the deep-rooted anthropocentric assumptions about human exceptionalism. Yet these non-anthropocentric perspectives must still find a place for human action; they require clear conceptualisations of human action and agency. It is generally acknowledged that human beings have a weighty moral responsibility for correcting the current global ecological crisis. For more than two millennia, theories of "praxis" supplied conceptualisations of action for the good of humankind. In this paper, we argue that the non-anthropocentric perspectives can be substantially extended and enhanced by a new theory of "transformative praxis" that breaks through the anthropocentric limit imposed by the notion of 'the good for humankind' to embrace collective human action for "planetary well-being." We call this approach "a praxis orientation to environmental education."
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- 2024
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36. Editorial: Impact and implications of AI methods and tools for the future of education.
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Okoye, Kingsley, Nganji, Julius T., Hiran, Kamal Kant, and Hosseini, Samira
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,NATURAL language processing ,EDUCATIONAL counseling ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,STUDENT engagement - Abstract
This document is an editorial that explores the potential impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on education. It emphasizes the need for guidelines and frameworks to facilitate the adoption of AI in educational settings. The document also presents a collection of research papers that cover various topics related to AI in education, including AI chatbots, predictive learning analytics, virtual reality, and blended learning. These papers provide valuable insights and empirical evidence for educators, policymakers, and AI developers interested in the future of education. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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37. STUDY TOUR FOR MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN JAPAN AND AUSTRALIA.
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Yugo Tomonaga and Gerrett-Magee, Rebecca
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MUNICIPAL government ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,STAKEHOLDERS ,DISCOURSE analysis ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Oriental Studies (Al-Farabi Kazakh National University) / Kazahskij Nacional'nyj Universitet Imeni Al'-Farabi Vestnik Seriâ Vostokovedeniâ is the property of Al-Farabi Kazakh National University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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38. Transformative innovation policy – lessons from the innovation system literature.
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Lundvall, Bengt-Åke
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
This paper criticizes attempts to present narrow perspectives on innovation policy as reflecting the use of the concept innovation system. While it is correct that innovation policy, at least until recently, has given higher priority to economic growth than to global challenges such as climate change and income inequality this is in no way immanent in the innovation system concept. To illustrate, the author introduces concepts and perspectives related to the innovation system approach which are particularly useful, when it comes to develop innovation policies aiming at system transformation. It is concluded that there is a need to combine different theoretical framings as inspiration for transformative innovation policy. In addition, all framings need to have a double focus on climate change and global income inequality, and they need to go beyond national perspectives and consider policies aiming at system transformation at the global level. While the paper refers to empirical illustrations it is principally conceptual. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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39. Assessment in the Age of Education 4.0: Unveiling Primitive and Hidden Parameters for Evaluation.
- Author
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Verma, Anil, Kaur, Parampreet, and Singh, Aman
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EMPLOYER-supported education ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,ASSESSMENT of education ,STUDENT engagement ,EDUCATIONAL resources - Abstract
This study delves into the nuanced aspects that influence the quality of education within the Education 4.0 framework. Education 4.0 epitomizes a contemporary educational paradigm leveraging IoT devices, sensors, and actuators to facilitate real-time and continuous assessment, thereby enhancing student evaluation methodologies. Within this context, the study scrutinizes the pivotal role of infrastructure, learning environment, and faculty, acknowledged as fundamental determinants of educational excellence. Identifying five discrete yet crucial hidden parameters, awareness, accessibility, participation, satisfaction, and academic loafing, this paper meticulously examines their ramifications within the Education 4.0 landscape. Employing a comparative analysis encompassing pre- and post-implementation scenarios, the research assesses the transformative impact of Education 4.0 on the educational sector while dissecting the influence of these hidden parameters across these temporal contexts. The findings underscore the substantial enhancements introduced by Education 4.0, including the provision of real-time and continuous assessment mechanisms, heightened accessibility to educational resources, and amplified student engagement levels. Notably, the study advocates for bolstering stakeholders' accountability as a strategic measure to mitigate academic loafing within an ambient educational milieu. In essence, this paper offers invaluable insights into the intricate interplay between hidden parameters and educational quality, elucidating the pivotal role of Education 4.0 in catalyzing advancements within the education industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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40. Using design based research to shift perspectives: a model for sustainable professional development for the innovative use of digital tools.
- Author
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Fowler, Samuel and Leonard, Simon N.
- Subjects
DESIGN research ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,EDUCATION research ,EDUCATIONAL technology - Abstract
Emerging digital technologies offer a transformative potential to redefine learning tasks and many examples of this potential are now available. The scaling of the innovative pedagogies emerging from the research into widespread and sustainable practice, however, remains problematic. This paper addresses the issue of scaling by using Design Based Research (DBR), also known as Educational Design Research, within teacher professional development to reposition teachers' thinking about the place of digital tools in their teaching. Using a project seeking to support the use of new digital technologies to develop children's spatial reasoning as a 'worked example', this paper highlights how the bringing together of the knowledge of educational research and knowledge of teaching practice in DBR can provide a catalyst for epistemic change. The paper will argue that DBR positions the knowledge and practice objects of both research and teaching as 'epistemic' or 'not yet known' objects and, therefore, the legitimate focus of experimentation and reflection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. Exploring the Pressures of Managerialism on Achieving Transformational Educational Leadership.
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Nwagbara, Uzoechi, Ibeawuchi, Ngozi, and Stewart, Jacyntha
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL leadership ,TRANSFORMATIONAL leadership ,LEADERSHIP ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,MANAGERIALISM ,ACADEMIC motivation - Abstract
The key preoccupation of this article is to investigate the nexus between "managerial turn" in higher education and transformational leadership in educational context. Leveraging on qualitative methodological approach linked to secondary data analysis, this paper explores the relationship between managerialism and transformational educational leadership. The analysis undertaken emphasises that transactional leaders in contrast to transformational leadership fails to inspire, motivate and encourage academics and other higher education staff given the pressures of managerialist regime that is buffeting the educational institutions. Managerialist pressures encourage cost minimisation, compliance regime, control, marketization of educational values and efficiency rhetoric that pervade the current landscape of higher education globally. This analysis and insights provided here will help to guide policymakers, educational institutions, academics and researchers to rethink the place of managerial practice in organisations for a better academic outcome, freedom of faculty members, restoring the pristine values of education and motivation of academics. Consequently, this paper contributes to the growing discourse on managerialism in educational institutions, which is currently undertheorised and understudied. It further sheds light on how reworking leadership style could bring innovativeness, competition and development within the educational sector for transformation as well as to rise against the backwater of management-oriented practices and policies that stifle effort at transformed educational leadership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. Navigating the Creative Landscape: Harnessing Ecosystems to Shape Future Innovators.
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Vaisnore, Aiste and Petraite, Monika
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,DIGITAL transformation ,DIGITAL technology ,DECISION making - Abstract
The intensifying complexities of global challenges demand novel training approaches that prepare future innovators and entrepreneurs to tackle issues characterized by ambiguity and intricacy. This paper explores how integrating arts and arts-driven methods within creative ecosystems can significantly enhance innovation skills related to creativity, imagination and out of the box thinking. Traditional training paradigms often fail to develop the multidisciplinary knowledge and creative decision-making required for futureoriented intelligence. By embedding arts into innovation and entrepreneurship training, we foster transformative learning environments that promote unconventional thinking and creativity. This approach aims to develop forwardthinking skills necessary for addressing modern demands. Our study reveals that arts-driven, experiential learning environments cultivate essential competencies, enabling individuals to creatively and efficiently solve complex problems, in that way shaping a new generation of innovative leaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
43. Academic activism: learning and self-transformation through collective action taking.
- Author
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Zourou, Katerina, Potolia, Anthippi, and Oikonomou, Stefania
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE action ,ACTIVISM ,CLIMATE change ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,SELF-perception ,LEARNING - Abstract
Activism, as a manifestation of citizen engagement for social purposes, can be practiced by individuals and communities alike, such as communities of professionals and, in this case, professionals in academia. Academic activism is a novel form of socio-political engagement in scholarly communities. Recently, communities engaged in academic activism have multiplied, mostly due to the climate emergency and increased awareness on human-induced climate change. This paper focuses on the learning elements and self-transformative potential of becoming an academic activist. This is done by analyzing three key areas: (a) the perceptions of self, (b) the learning component, and (c) the educational component, namely teaching the very activities that activists carry out at their universities. To serve these objectives, we conducted eight semi-directive interviews during the summer of 2022 in which participants drew upon their personal experience and life trajectories in their journey to becoming academic activists. Using a Discourse Analytical framework, we scrutinized the semantic fields summoned and the discursive spaces mobilized by the interviewees. The findings of this study highlight the participants' determination for activism, depicting it as a conscious act, a duty. Moreover, three types of learning have been depicted, demonstrating the wealth of learning trajectories experienced. The potential impact of academic activism on teaching practices (societal role of education) has also been depicted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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44. Blockchain Based DApps for Education.
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Ojog, Silviu, POCATILU, Paul, and ALECU, Felician
- Subjects
BLOCKCHAINS ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,ELECTRONIC portfolios ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Blockchain technology has captured the attention of various industries due to its potential to revolutionize traditional systems through decentralization, transparency and immutability. This paper examines the emerging trend of integrating blockchain-based decentralized applications (DApps) into the education sector. With blockchain's distributed ledger system, educational institutions can achieve safe, secure and transparent management of student achievements, certifications and credentials. The paper presents the architecture of a system that enables students to build verifiable digital portfolios of educational achievements stored and shared securely using smart contracts and digital tokens. By harnessing the benefits and addressing the challenges of blockchain DAppps in education, we can pave the way for a truly transformative era in the learning experience of tomorrow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Women-only training programmes as tools for professional development: analysis and outcomes of a transformative learning process.
- Author
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Chasserio, Stephanie and Bacha, Eliane
- Subjects
CAREER development ,GENDER nonconformity ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,WOMEN'S attitudes ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,HUMAN resources departments - Abstract
Purpose: Based on the transformative learning theory, this paper analyses a French women-only training programme (WOTP) that aims to develop women's soft skills in their professional contexts. This paper aims to focus on the process of personal transformation, the collective dimensions and the unexpected effects of the transformation. Design/methodology/approach: This paper used a mixed qualitative design that mainly combines a qualitative two-step study of 47 women to assess their personal changes in terms of self-confidence, self-efficacy and assertiveness. This paper used 13 semi-structured interviews to explore the perceived changes in-depth. Findings: The analysis shows that beyond "fixing their lack of skills" – including self-limiting behaviours, low feelings of self-efficacy and difficulty claiming one's place – a WOTP can trigger a transformational learning experience at the individual level and can modify the surveyed women's attitudes and behaviours at work. The results also highlight the collective dimension of transformation and, to some extent, an avenue for a societal transformation. Practical implications: One can state that these WOTPs may positively contribute to human resources development in organisations, and that they may be considered a relevant practice in the move to promote women and gender diversity in organisations. Originality/value: The findings reveal that, at their individual levels, these women may become agents of change by influencing and acting in their professional lives. The results stress that training women may contribute to organisational changes in terms of gender diversity. These findings contribute to the enrichment of the transformative learning theory by developing the collective and societal dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Metaverse changing realm of human resource learning – a viewpoint.
- Author
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Mehta, Mita
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the potential of metaverse in human resource (HR) learning as a new paradigm postpandemic scenario. This article highlights the use of the metaverse as a training tool for today's organizations. Design/methodology/approach: This paper offers the author's opinion based on experience with the application of Metaverse into HR learning for the transformative learning experience. Findings: Research and trends in metaverse hold strong potential to be implemented as a transformative learning experience across organizations. The article then presents the metaverse learning application with the TL concept. Originality/value: This is a viewpoint article and opens threads of the plethora of future directions in the application of the metaverse as a learning and development tool through empirical research work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Student Voting on ICP Blockchain: A Decentralized Web3 Approach-An Infrastructure Protection System.
- Author
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Kodepogu, Koteswara Rao, Dharmateja, Mudigonda, Kumar, Jillela Manoj, Gopi Krishna, Muraboina Hari Pavan, and Ramu, Kodali
- Subjects
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,BLOCKCHAINS ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,STUDENT records ,SECURITY systems ,VOTING - Abstract
In this exploration, our paper delves into the intricate implementation of robust authentication and transaction management within educational blockchain systems. Our project showcases a commitment to privacy and integrity, safeguarding interactions through advanced cryptographic techniques. The multifaceted capabilities of blockchain technology are showcased through the seamless maintenance of student records, the facilitation of secure voting processes, and the optimization of token transfers, collectively contributing to an ecosystem characterized by enhanced security, transparency, and efficiency. Our study uncovers insights into blockchain's transformative potential in education, redefining paradigms by introducing security measures and transparency to student-admin interactions. We highlight the successful implementation of blockchainbased authentication and transaction management systems, leading to enhanced educational processes. Additionally, we briefly outline our research design and methodology, emphasizing the rigorous approach to exploring blockchain applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Repair in Education Spaces.
- Author
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Walker, Melanie
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,HUMAN beings ,JUSTICE ,DIGNITY - Abstract
The paper discusses repair as valuable for thinking about and acting towards sustainable human development. Repair asks us to take account of intersections of past, present, and reimagined futures; the end is becoming and being full human beings with dignity, attentive to the lives of others and to what Achille Mbembe calls the "living world". We seek to repair that which is valuable to us, while also setting aside what cannot be fixed (for example colonialism and apartheid). The concept of repair is proposed as a lens to think about some disrepair challenges facing development: the enduring effects of history on justice, skewed global knowledge relations, and racism. The ideas are then applied to the space of education. A repair praxis framework is proposed based on four overlapping dimensions: conviviality as incompleteness; advancing epistemic freedoms; fostering transformational learning; and, spaces of dialogue and participation. The paper concludes with an example of renaming the world to repair the world and finally reminds us that we should pay attention to who we are with others, to what we repair, and to the kind of ancestors we choose to be for future generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Transforming universities: Mobilizing research and education for sustainability transitions at Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- Author
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Loorbach, Derk A. and Wittmayer, Julia
- Subjects
COLLEGE student adjustment ,EDUCATION research ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,UNIVERSITY research ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The dominant model of universities, especially in the social sciences, is often based upon academic disciplines, objectivity, and a linear knowledge-transfer model. It facilitates competition between academics, educating students for specific professions from an objective, descriptive, and neutral position. This paper argues that this institutional model of universities is inadequate to contribute effectively to societal transitions towards just and sustainable futures. Taking the Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR), the Netherlands, as an example, this paper illustrates the problems with the dominant (twentieth century) model of universities in the social sciences and explores what strategies universities can develop to transform. It introduces the notions of transformative research and transformative education: transdisciplinary, collaborative, and action-oriented academic work that explicitly aims to support societal transitions. It presents the design impact transition (DIT) platform as an 'institutional experiment' at the EUR and a concerted and strategic effort that lays bare current lock-ins of the dominant university model and the kind of institutional work needed to transform universities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Polar bears, climate change, and trusted messengers: informing the Contextual Model of Transformative Learning Theory.
- Author
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Bueddefeld, Jill and Van Winkle, Christine
- Subjects
CONTEXTUAL learning ,ECOTOURISM ,POLAR bear ,CLIMATE change ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
Nature-based tourism is often touted as an inherently effective form of ecotourism, where visitors become ambassadors for the places they visit and participate in transformative experiences. However, research demonstrates that behavior change and transformative experiences remain elusive. This study builds upon the Contextual Model of Learning and Transformative Learning Theory by exploring visitors' learning and behavior change at both in situ and ex situ polar bear tourism experiences. A detailed conceptual analysis and integration of existing literature provides evidence to support an integration of these learning frameworks to more effectively guide the intentional design of visitor experiences in order to target specific outcomes and domains of learning. This paper offers an important next step in providing a guiding process to facilitate and evaluate free-choice learning experiences that seek to offer visitors more intentionally designed, impactful, and potentially transformative experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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