3,836 results on '"Kiribati"'
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2. Policy Borrowing and Teacher Professionalism: Tensions in Reforming Systems in Response to SDG4c in the Pacific Islands
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Hogan, Anna, Thompson, Greg, and Chandra, Vinesh
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This article examines attempts to professionalize the teaching workforce in the Pacific Islands (PI) in response to the United Nation Sustainable Development Goal 4c -- "Increase the Supply of Qualified Teachers in Developing Countries." The experience of PI educators provides insight into the clash between global standard agendas, driven by targets and indicators, and distinct local realities or vernaculars. Questionnaire data from 82 teacher and principal participants in seven Pacific Island nations and six interviews with education bureaucrats and teacher union officials in Fiji suggest that the goal of enhancing teacher professionalism through credentialism can lead to paradoxical deprofessionalization and Indicator 4.c.1, limit the possibilities of teacher professionalization because of the narrowness of the indicator and the enactment of this in specific systems. The Pacific Islands is an under-researched context that highlights the problems with policy borrowing, particularly regarding the idea that developing countries can measure their way to professionalism. Indeed, more voice needs to be given to local practitioners to better understand their needs and aspirations and how the vernaculars of culture and place can enhance (not diminish) teacher professionalism.
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- 2022
3. Reopening with Resilience: Lessons from Remote Learning during COVID-19 in East Asia and the Pacific
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UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (Italy), Jeon, Youngkwang, Dreesen, Thomas, Fushimi, Akihiro, and Koeppl, Dominik
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COVID-19 school closures in East Asia and the Pacific threaten to widen existing learning inequities and increase the number of children out of school. During the pandemic, governments rapidly deployed remote learning strategies, ranging from paper-based take-home materials to digital platforms. However, lack of electricity -- critical to connectivity -- remains a key obstacle for the region, particularly in rural areas. Therefore, while digital learning platforms were offered by most Southeast Asian countries, take-up was low. A combination of modalities -- including mobile phone-based learning strategies -- and collaboration with a range of non-governmental education stakeholders have the potential to enhance the reach of remote learning and to make it more engaging for students. Lessons from the regional implementation of these strategies emphasize the importance of research to understand the needs of students, educators and parents and the impact of remote learning, especially in low-resource contexts.
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- 2021
4. It's Not Too Late to Act on Early Learning: Understanding and Recovering from the Impact of Pre-Primary Education Closures during COVID-19. Innocenti Research Brief 2021-03
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UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (Italy), Nugroho, Dita, Jeon, Youngkwang, Kamei, Akito, and Lopez Boo, Florencia
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This paper presents a new estimate that pre-primary school closures in 2020 may cost today's young children US$ 1.6 trillion in lost earnings over their lifetimes. However, most low-and-middle income countries are leaving pre-primary education out of their responses to COVID-19. This paper also draws lessons from accelerated, bridging, and remedial programmes on how introducing or expanding these transition programmes in the early years can mitigate the long-term impact on learning from pre-primary school closures.
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- 2021
5. Virtual Reality Enhances Safety Training in the Maritime Industry: An Organizational Training Experiment with a Non-Weird Sample
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Makransky, Guido and Klingenberg, Sara
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Objective: Many industries struggle with training dynamic risk assessment, and how to bridge the gap between safety training and behavior in real life scenarios. In this article, we focus on dynamic risk assessment during a mooring operation and investigate the potential value of using immersive virtual reality (VR) simulations compared to standard training procedures in an international maritime training organization. Methods: In a pilot study, we compared two ways of implementing a VR simulation (stand-alone or with post-simulation reflection) to a manual and a personal trainer condition in a between-subjects design with 86 students in a maritime school. Based on the results we compared the stand-alone VR simulation to the personal trainer condition in a between-subjects design in a non-Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) sample of 28 seafarers from the Kiribati Islands at an international maritime training organization. Results: The VR simulation group reported significantly higher perceived enjoyment (d = 1.28), intrinsic motivation (d = 0.96), perceived learning (d = 0.90), and behavioral change (d = 0.88), and significantly lower extraneous cognitive load (d = 0.82) compared to the personal trainer group, but the differences in self-efficacy, and safety attitudes were not significant. Discussion: The results support the value of using VR to train procedures that are difficult to train in the real world and suggest that VR technologies can be useful for providing just in time training anywhere, anytime, in a global market where employees are increasingly cross-cultural and dislocated.
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- 2022
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6. Educating for Sustainability in Remote Locations
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Reading, Chris, Khupe, Constance, Redford, Morag, Wallin, Dawn, Versland, Tena, Taylor, Neil, and Hampton, Patrick
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At a time when social, economic and political decisions, along with environmental events, challenge the viability of remote communities, educators need to better prepare young people in these communities to work towards sustainability. Remote locations can be defined by their inaccessibility rather than just distance from the nearest services, while the sustainability construct encapsulates a range of community needs: environmental, social, cultural and economic. This paper describes experiences that involve innovative approaches towards educating for sustainability in remote locations in six diverse countries: South Africa, Scotland, Canada, United States of America, Pacific Island Nations, and Australia. For each, the nature of what constitutes a "remote" location, as well as the detail and challenges of the innovation are presented. Readers should consider how they might more suitably educate the next generation to protect, showcase and learn from/with the local knowledges and capacities of the people and environments in remote locations.
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- 2019
7. Open Educational Resources in the Commonwealth 2021
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Commonwealth of Learning (COL) (Canada)
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The present report is the outcome of a study on the status of OER in the Commonwealth conducted in late 2021. Considering the importance of OER in the context of the challenges posed by COVID-19, the findings shall be useful for Member States and educational institutions to mainstream OER. The overall objective is to help countries across the Commonwealth understand the status of OER and develop strategies and action plans for the implementation of the 2019 UNESCO Recommendation on OER. [For "Open Educational Resources in the Commonwealth 2016," see ED574419.]
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- 2022
8. Preparing I-Kiribati for the Future: Probing the English Language Research-Policy Nexus in Kiribati Education in the South Pacific
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Ohi, Sarah and Ingram, Paia
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Histories of colonization conjointly with the current economic global climate have enabled English to become a dominant global language. The desire for citizens to attain English language proficiency on a nation-wide level is a common pursuit in developing countries, including the island nations of the South Pacific where English competency is viewed as invaluable to education and associated with promising futures. Despite the threat to their own indigenous languages, in Education, a strong emphasis upon English permeates the South Pacific islands through government agendas, policies, and into teaching practice. Confronted with preparing for imminent migration due to rising sea levels, the Kiribati government is striving to prepare its citizens for impending diaspora. This article reports a study of the research-policy nexus in English language learning in schools, in the context of the Micronesian nation of Kiribati. Critical analysis of two government English teaching policies that shape curriculum, identified that the research-policy nexus lacked sufficient clarity; characterized with undefined terms, some contradictory information and an unclear research base. Implications for improving Education policies, Teacher Education, and classroom English teaching practices are provided and the argument made that further research is warranted to strengthen English language learning policies in the South Pacific.
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- 2022
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9. Out-of-School Children: A Contemporary View from the Pacific Island Countries of the Commonwealth
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Commonwealth of Learning (COL) (Canada) and Narayan, Sharishna
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This publication on out-of-school-children (OOSC) in the Pacific is a timely and important contribution to consider interventions to ameliorate educational disparities in the region. A contemporary view of the nine Pacific Island Countries (PICs) that are also members of the Commonwealth are captured as distinct case studies in the publication. These states have made some progress in strengthening their education systems and enabling more children to enrol in school, yet universal access remains elusive. Open schooling, broadly defined as utilising flexible approaches to learning based on the principles of open and distance learning, is presented as a means to reach more young people seeking learning opportunities in these PICs. [This report was written with support from Tony Mays, Som Naidu, and Kirk Perris.]
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- 2021
10. Improving Kiribati Educational Outcomes: Capacity-Building of School Leaders and Teachers Using Sustainable Approaches and Donor Support
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Owen, Susanne M.
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Using effective models for continuing teacher and school leader education in developing countries is essential for long-term improvement of the education system and student outcomes. Instructional leadership approaches have been used to capacity-build school leaders, improving leader skills in working with teachers on classroom practices and also focusing on ongoing monitoring of student academic progress. Foreign aid frequently supports such initiatives concerned with turning around school systems in developing countries, with local ownership and integration within national frameworks being essential to ensure sustainability. This paper outlines a leadership programme and processes for Kiribati. Early findings and challenges are outlined within the context of instructional leadership models, as well as strategies used to address issues. The programme has relevance for other continuing education programmes in developing countries, especially within foreign aid situations.
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- 2020
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11. Report to Commonwealth Education Ministers: From Response to Resilience
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Commonwealth of Learning (COL) (Canada), Kanwar, Asha, and Daniel, John
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This brief to Ministers of Education provides examples of how governments and institutions made it possible for people to continue their education during the COVID-19 pandemic and identifies factors that contributed to success.
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- 2020
12. Using Vocational Education to Support Development Solutions in the Pacific: An Emphasis on Climate Change and Health
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Hausia Havea, Peni, Siga, Amelia, Rabuatoka, Titilia, Tagivetaua Tamani, Apenisa, Devi, Priya, Senikula, Ruci, Hemstock, Sarah L, and Jacot des Combes, Helene
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In this article , author(s) reported on the results of the EU PacTVET project, which explored the use of TVET to support resilience in the region with an emphasis on climate change and health. An exploratory design was used to investigate how vocational education supports solutions for climate change and health. The results showed that vocational education plays a significant role in building safety and resilience of people in the region. Most significantly, getting an accredited qualification on health resilience and/or job in the health sector may help them to respond to climate change effectively and efficiently.
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- 2020
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13. Old Languages in New Academic Spaces: Emergent Pedagogy for Tertiary Programmes in Pacific Languages
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Willans, Fiona
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This paper considers an appropriate pedagogy for indigenous language programmes at tertiary level in a context in which a former colonial language has become the default as both medium of instruction and subject of academic study. This pedagogy is guided by an overarching commitment to decolonisation of the academic space, is grounded in the sociolinguistic realities of each specific context, and remains flexible enough to accommodate the complexities that are inevitable when a language is made welcome for the first time in a new domain. A recent expansion in the number of languages offered for study at the University of the South Pacific serves as the backdrop to this discussion.
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- 2020
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14. School Leadership Capacity-Building: Developing Country Successful Case Studies
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Owen, Susanne Mary, Toaiauea, Toabwa, Timee, Tekonnang, Harding, Tebetaio, and Taoaba, Taaruru
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Purpose: Systems educational reform in developing countries through effective principal capacity- building programs is essential for improving student learning, with the purpose of this paper being to use case studies to identify key success factors in the implementation of an instructional leadership program in the developing country of Kiribati. Design/methodology/approach: A case study approach involving mixed methods including semi-structured interviews and document analysis was used within three purposively sampled schools to examine implementation success factors relevant to instructional leadership literature. Findings: The case studies reveal the overall value of the Kiribati instructional leadership program involving school leader workshops and ongoing coaching support, with instructional leadership reflecting directive and collaborative, as well as transformative theoretical aspects. Key implementation success factors within researched schools were leaders undertaking regular observations in classrooms, systematic tracking of student achievement and nurturing a positive culture for learning, as well as establishment of various collaborative processes involving community and teacher peer learning groups. Research limitations/implications: The study provides in-depth information through teacher and school leader interviews and examining relevant school documentation artefacts. A limitation is that the study involved only three schools and was undertaken less than a year into program implementation. Future research involving more schools and several years after implementation would be beneficial to investigate sustainability across the school system and longer-term program impacts. Practical implications: The data provides practical tips for school leaders regarding effective teacher capacity-building approaches, as well as providing information for policy makers, especially in developing countries, about effective professional development programs for school leaders and teachers. Originality/value: The study examines a system-wide workshop series and coaching approach to school leader and teacher capacity-building in a developing country from a theoretical and practical perspective relevant to instructional leadership and also transformational leadership, which is an under-researched area.
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- 2020
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15. Large-Scale Learning Assessments in Asia-Pacific: A Mapping of Country Policies and Practices
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United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Bangkok (Thailand) and United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Bangkok (Thailand)
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In their pledge to achieve Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4, countries across the globe have turned their attention to improving quality education, which includes student learning assessments. For many countries, implementing learning assessments is crucial to monitoring educational outcomes by providing data for education policies and reviewing the teaching and learning process. Many countries in the Asia-Pacific region have invested significant time and energy to monitor students' learning outcomes and enhance school performances. To support these efforts in Asia and the Pacific, UNESCO Bangkok and the Network on Education Quality Monitoring in the Asia-Pacific (NEQMAP) surveyed the region's countries to map national policies and practices of learning assessments. The analysis is based on responses from 24 countries on their assessment policies and practices from 2005 to 2015 and highlights several important insights for countries to strengthen their national assessment systems, from capacity building and improved coordination to better dissemination and utilization of results. [This report was prepared by Professor Esther Sui Chu Ho, with the assistance of Thomas SK Lee, KW Sum and Mi Wang.]
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- 2020
16. Review of Research on Student Nonenrollment and Chronic Absenteeism: A Report for the Pacific Region. REL 2015-054
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Regional Educational Laboratory Pacific (ED), National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (ED), McREL International, Black, Aime T., Seder, Richard C., and Kekahio, Wendy
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In some areas of the Regional Educational Laboratory (REL) Pacific Region, between one-fourth and a half of secondary school-age students are not enrolled in school. Not being enrolled in school or being chronically absent can have lasting effects on students' economic and social development. This REL Pacific report summarizes research on nonenrollment and chronic absenteeism from the United States and emergent nations that share characteristics with Pacific island nations. Four types of factors influence student nonenrollment and absenteeism: student-specific, family-specific, school-specific, and community-specific. Many of these potential factors are interconnected, and the effects of these factors may vary by region. Therefore, educators, policymakers, and family and community members in the Pacific Region may need to gather additional data in order to explore these factors in their own communities. Stakeholders can also use this review to begin to identify the root causes for why students are not in school in order to develop and implement targeted strategies to support student enrollment and attendance. The following are appended: (1) Calculating the net enrollment rate; (2) Net enrollment rates in Pacific island nations; and (3) Data collection and methodology.
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- 2014
17. Shame in English Language Teaching: Desirable Pedagogical Possibilities for Kiribati in Neoliberal Times
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Liyanage, Indika and Canagarajah, Suresh
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Inadequate attention paid to understanding the complex relations between personal drives and situated social constraints means affect remains the least understood of language learning variables (Scovel, 2001). At a time when English is uncritically and universally treated as desirable, it is significant that its learning and use evokes shame in some communities. In this study, the authors analyze how Kiribati nationals and international development workers demonstrate conflicting orientations to shame relating to learning and using English. They consider whether shame of this nature might have positive value for learning, communication, and identity. Theorizing the productive significance of shame also helps deconstruct dominant notions of language competence, motivation, and pedagogical practice based on desire. The authors articulate policy and pedagogical options sensitive to local values and interests that might help resolve tensions in the perspectives of the powerful outsiders and dependent locals that lead to confusions in educational priorities and prove somewhat debilitating for local English language teaching (ELT) pedagogies. The authors conclude that ELT researchers and practitioners must proceed to distinguish different motivations for shame in English language learning contexts and identify the shame emerging from local community norms as deserving more recognition.
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- 2019
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18. Foreign Aid and Inclusive Education in the Pacific Island Nation of Kiribati: A Question of Ownership
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Yates, Rodney, Carrington, Suzanne, Gillett-Swan, Jenna, and Pillay, Hitendra
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This study examines the influence of foreign aid and local ownership in the introduction of inclusive education in Kiribati. The data reported in this paper were collected through interviews with key local stakeholders and these data are part of a larger study. Data were analysed under the major theme of ownership, and were grouped into the four sub-themes of: local responses to inclusive education initiatives; support for inclusive education principles; local attitudes regarding the contribution of Australian Aid; and, sustainability with or without aid support. The results indicate that a positive commitment towards inclusive education is emerging and that Australian Aid provided essential advocacy for children with disabilities in Kiribati through direct management of initiatives by the expatriate administered Kiribati Education Facility. Inclusive education initiatives remain dependent on Australian Aid for direction and sustainability. Sustainability of inclusive education initiatives in Kiribati will depend on continued development of local ownership including community support and commitment by the Government of Kiribati, particularly budgetary support.
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- 2019
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19. Education in the Commonwealth: Towards and beyond the Internationally Agreed Goals
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Commonwealth Secretariat (England), Menefee, Trey, and Bray, Mark
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This report was produced for the 2012 Conference of Commonwealth Education Ministers meeting in Mauritius. Its main purpose is to track the historical progress and likelihood of attainment of Education For All and education-specific Millennium Development Goals while also critically reviewing the methods used to track this progress. The analyses is presented by country, by region, and by development-level. (Contains 2 illustrations and 5 tables.) [This document was produced by the Comparative Education Research Centre (CERC) at the University of Hong Kong. The report was commissioned for the 18th Conference of Commonwealth Education Ministers (CCEM), held in Mauritius Aug 28-31, 2012, based around the theme "Education in the Commonwealth: Bridging the Gap As We Accelerate towards Achieving Internationally Agreed Goals."]
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- 2012
20. Near, Far, Wherever You Are: Chemistry via Distance in the South Seas
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Chandra, Shaneel and Sharma, Bibhya
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The University of the South Pacific is owned by 12 nations in the South Pacific Ocean. The institution provides higher education through its 14 campuses, with at least 1 campus per member country. To be able to overcome the geographical divide and isolation, while ensuring high-quality learning and teaching, the university utilizes Internet, satellite, and mobile devices and other Information and Communications Technology (ICT) tools and technologies to provide virtual classroom experience. This article outlines the approaches adopted in offering a first-year chemistry course, in parallel, through face-to-face and distance modes. The novel attributes of bridging the geographical divide are presented. The article concludes with a discussion of new innovations that will further bring the classroom to the student irrespective of where the student is in the world.
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- 2018
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21. Adaptive Capacity in the Pacific Region: A Study of Continuous Professional Development for In-Service Teachers in Kiribati
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Martin, Tess and Thomson, Ian
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This study of I-Kiribati secondary school teachers used a project-based approach to investigate the notions of school-based and collaborative learning as a suitable model for in-service teacher continuous professional development (CPD). The design and methodology adopted by the study framed the argument that since collaborative behavior is integral in Kiribati and Pacific community daily life it could be a suitably applied in the workplace to promote effective learning. At the same time the study was designed to investigate a system of learning for teachers in Kiribati that would address their needs, in particular being school-based. The study revealed that cultural influences in Kiribati such as: the role of leaders, respect for elders and secret knowledge have a strong influence on teacher behavior both inside and outside the classroom. The recommendations concur with research literature that suggests developing effective policy and practices in the Pacific region must be driven by and strongly reflect cultural practices, values and beliefs. Importantly, the notion that some cultural practices may conflict when applied in different settings provides an added dimension to the body of literature.
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- 2018
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22. Children's Rights in Education Research: From Aims to Outcomes
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Smith, Hilary A. and Haslett, Stephen J.
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One approach to children's rights in research is to adopt a methodology that focuses on eliciting children's perspectives. Ensuring representative participation from all children allows a diversity of contexts to be reflected in the results, and points to ways in which improvements can be made in specific settings. In cultural contexts where participation in decision-making is not a traditional role for children, their viewpoints are likely to provide results that highlight differences between cultural norms and children's rights, and can offer an important focus of dialogue among stakeholders. It is proposed that children's rights can therefore become integral to the whole process of a quantitative research project. This paper describes such an approach used in a Pacific Islands study, which investigated the quality of schooling through a probability-based sample survey of 1560 children in the first three years of formal education in 55 schools in Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and Kiribati.
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- 2017
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23. 'I Fear Kiribati Will Be Gone Forever': Exploring Eco-Literacy in One Social Sciences Classroom
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Morgan, John and Iki, Maria
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This article describes and discusses a unit of work taught by Maria Iki, a Social Sciences teacher at James Cook High School in South Auckland. The unit was taught as part of the TLRI project Tuhia ki Te Ao--Write to the Natural World. The project is concerned to develop students' eco-literacy and to help them to inform their environmental identities. This article: (1) provides readers with an account of how the issue of sea-level rise in the Pacific Island of Kiribati can be understood through a model of 3D eco-literacy; (2) offers Maria's reflections on the challenges involved in teaching the unit; (3) discusses the 3D eco-literacy developed in the unit; and (4) ends with some comments about how Maria plans to develop the unit in the second iteration of the project.
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- 2017
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24. Open Educational Resources in the Commonwealth 2016
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Commonwealth of Learning (COL) (British Columbia), Phalachandra, B., and Abeywardena, Ishan
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This study was conducted as part of the OER for Skills Development project of COL, supported by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The objective of the study was to collect baseline data from Commonwealth institutions with respect to the development, use and reuse of OER; the availability of support; and challenges faced in fostering the use of OER. Six research questions were formed, after reviewing previous studies, to analyse the status of OER in the Commonwealth, based on four recommendations of the 2012 Paris OER Declaration. A Survey Questionnaire is appended.
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- 2016
25. Design and Implementation Issues in Surveying the Views of Young Children in Ethnolinguistically Diverse Developing Country Contexts
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Smith, Hilary A. and Haslett, Stephen J.
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This paper discusses issues in the development of a methodology appropriate for eliciting sound quantitative data from primary school children in the complex contexts of ethnolinguistically diverse developing countries. Although these issues often occur in field-based surveys, the large extent and compound effects of their occurrence in ethnolinguistically diverse developing countries, particularly in research with young children, means that they combine to be imperative for project viability in these contexts. At the same time, the scale of the challenges often also means that they are regarded as unsurmountable and are disregarded at the very time when the need is highest to provide sound quantitative data on which to base education policy. The paper provides a framework of these interlocking issues relating to a survey's overall approach, instruments, the sampling scheme, and implementation. This is illustrated in detail via a large-scale cross-national study carried out with children in each grade level of Years 1-6 in three Pacific Island countries of Vanuatu, Kiribati, and Solomon Islands.
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- 2016
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26. Identifying Disability-Inclusive Indicators Currently Employed to Monitor and Evaluate Education in the Pacific Island Countries
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Sharma, Umesh, Forlin, Chris, Sprunt, Beth, and Merumeru, Laisiasa
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Fourteen member countries of the Pacific Islands Forum have adopted The Pacific Education Development Framework as a means of improving quality of education across the region. Within this framework, special education and inclusive education are seen as priority areas that endorse a rights-based approach to education. Aligned with other Pacific regional advances for improving the measurement of the effectiveness of this Framework, is the development of a set of indicators to measure efforts towards disability-inclusive education specifically in the Pacific islands. The aim of this study is to identify existing measures that governments currently employ to report against education outcomes. Data were collected by written responses from relevant ministries in the 14 Pacific member countries to a set of questions specifically developed to address this aim. This paper provides an analysis of these surveys and discusses how these data are informing the development of the indicators to ensure the provision of quality education for children with disabilities in the Pacific islands.
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- 2016
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27. Paradise Lost: Introducing Students to Climate Change through Story
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Bennon, Brady
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"This country has been the basis of my being. And when it's no longer there, you know, it's unthinkable." Ueantabo Mackenzie's haunting words in the PBS NOW documentary "Paradise Lost" shook the author. He knew he wanted to teach a unit on global warming, especially after participating in the Portland-area Rethinking Schools curriculum group, Earth in Crisis. The author didn't have to be convinced that students need to learn about global warming. But Mackenzie's message startled him: Global warming is here, right now, and it is uprooting people and destroying nations today, starting with Mackenzie's home on the island nation of Kiribati. (Contains 2 resources.)
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- 2013
28. Approaches to English Literacy Teaching in the Central Pacific Republic of Kiribati: Quality Teaching, Educational Aid and Curriculum Reform
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Burnett, Greg
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English literacy competence in the Central Pacific Republic of Kiribati is considered important for employment, overseas study and general engagement with a globalizing world. It is also considered as a key factor in the current government's response to climate change and sea level rise, enabling skilled relocation of I-Kiribati to other countries if necessary. This article synthesizes a range of literature sources based on Kiribati literacy education to highlight: a general perception that English literacy standards are in decline; the role of the teacher in addressing that decline; pedagogical approaches to teaching literacy, particularly the historic swing from a highly structured and socially conservative teacher-centred approach to that of a very liberal student-centred approach; and the reliance on Australian and NZ educational aid and consultancy in literacy education. These issues require further debate and investigation in light of unique development problems in Kiribati marked by: rural to urban drift; an increasingly youthful population; limited employment possibilities, and eventual possible large-scale repatriation due to sea level rise. The article tentatively suggests an approach to literacy education based on a four resources model that balances teacher and learner-centredness with socio-cultural and political aspects of literacy.
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- 2013
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29. Assessing Fluency: Are the Criteria Fair?
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Liyanage, Indika and Gardner, Rod
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In formal assessments of second-language speakers' fluency, the criteria used frequently fail to differentiate between real disfluency and interactionally effective practices, while superficially disfluent, that help with communication and are used by first language speakers. In this study, we focused on pausing, silences and self-repairs in the speech samples in two data sets: the classroom talk of two L1 teachers of English, and mock IELTS interviews of i-Kiribati students. We found that these features and their frequency and distribution were often very similar in the two data sets suggesting that a superficial observance of disfluency markers in the case of L2 speakers hides practices that may in fact display a high level of competence. We highlight the caution that needs to be exercised when making fluency judgements.
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- 2013
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30. Using Education to Bring Climate Change Adaptation to Pacific Communities
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Vize, Sue
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Traditional communities remain a dominant feature in the Pacific and are key players in land and sea management. Fostering improved climate literacy is therefore essential to equip communities to respond to the current and future challenges posed by climate change in the region. Increased understanding and development of skills to respond to the impacts of climate change is being pursued by integrating all aspects of climate change across the school curriculum. This article examines some of the work being done on climate change education in the Pacific and the proposed development of strengthened approaches to climate change education, in particular highlighting the case of Kiribati. (Contains 1 table, 1 figure and 5 notes.)
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- 2012
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31. Narrative Frames and Needs Analysis
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Macalister, John
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Needs analysis plays an important role in curriculum design. In particular, needs analysis largely determines the goal and content of the course being designed. When selecting among the many tools available to analyze needs the course designer must consider practicality as well as validity and reliability. In this paper, I report on the novel use of narrative frames as a needs analysis tool in the design of an EFL curriculum for trainee seamen in Kiribati. The frames proved to be a practical tool for gathering information from a large group of serving seamen, and provided insights that would not otherwise have been possible. Furthermore, the seamen's stories could be adapted for materials design, meaning that trainees were engaged with authentic situations in their language learning. Thus narrative frames were found to be a valuable tool in the needs analysis for the new EFL curriculum and are a tool that could be used more widely in curriculum design. (Contains 2 figures.)
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- 2012
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32. Open and Flexible TVET in Commonwealth Pacific Countries
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Commonwealth of Learning and Neal, Terry
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This report examines the current state of open and flexible technical-vocational education and training (TVET) in nine Pacific Commonwealth countries: Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. The Commonwealth of Learning (COL) has commissioned the Open Polytechnic to complete this report to assist COL understand where best to target its efforts in these countries. The report defines open and flexible TVET as worthwhile learning offered in ways that give learners more choice of how they acquire knowledge and skills relevant for current employment and citizenship. Appended are: (1) Interview guide; and (2) Summary of TVET by country. (Contains 1 figure and 2 tables.) [This report was published by Open Polytechnic of New Zealand.]
- Published
- 2011
33. Language Games and Schooling: Discourses of Colonialism in Kiribati Education
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Burnett, Greg
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The present secondary education system in Kiribati is little changed from its establishment and growth through the colonial years when the island group was known as the Gilbert Islands. It is marked by a heavy emphasis on English language and a curriculum geared to place students in a limited labour market. It is also marked by an uneven distribution of privilege across the population it serves. This article suggests a theoretical basis for critiquing the dominant voices in the educational and colonial past and their representations of Kiribati others. In such a critique, the legitimising technologies and discursive practices that have helped shape these educational practices are exposed. The act of exposing "how they did it" in turn creates the conditions for more equitable educational futures. This article presents a critical postcolonial discourse analysis of some language and language teaching policies from the Kiribati educational and colonial past. Though focused on Kiribati, the ideas here have relevance across the Pacific region.
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- 2005
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34. Tarawa Landing: Proving Ground for Pacific Victory.
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Fox, Thomas
- Abstract
Points out the importance of the Tarawa landing in the Gilbert Islands during World War II, and recommends teaching about the event. Provides detailed analysis of the November 21-24, 1943, amphibious assault by U.S. Marines. Examines the rationale for the location, timing, and type of attack. Identifies key personnel. Includes intelligence map of Tarawa atoll. (CH)
- Published
- 1990
35. Rural Library Service in the Republic of Kiribati.
- Author
-
Evans, John and Etekiera, Kunei
- Abstract
Describes attempts to develop library services in the island republic of Kiribati (the Gilbert, Phoenix, and Line islands). The development of rural library service in conjunction with school libraries is discussed, a postal library service is described, the establishment of village libraries is discussed, and constraints that have inhibited development of library services are examined. (11 references) (LRW)
- Published
- 1990
36. Post-Primary School Non-Academic Alternatives: A South Pacific Study.
- Author
-
Hindson, Colin
- Abstract
Compares attempts and outcomes in Fiji junior secondary schools and in Kiribati community high schools to provide alternative schooling of either vocational or local/practical orientation. Focuses on nature of educational decision-making process and influence of public pressures on planners and politicians. Identifies new and influential factors emerging from 1970-1980. (NEC)
- Published
- 1985
37. Kiribati (Gilbertese): Special Skills Handbook. Peace Corps Language Handbook Series.
- Author
-
School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT. and Trussel, Stephen
- Abstract
This handbook is a collection of readings intended to acquaint Peace Corps volunteers with the geography, history, and culture of the Gilbert Islands. Some of the readings are in English, but most are in Kiribati. Four of the Kiribati readings are accompanied by linear translations; the others have English summaries. The concluding parts of the book include maps, a gazatteer, population census information, and plant names. The text is illustrated with pen-and-ink drawings. (AMH)
- Published
- 1979
38. Kiribati (Gilbertese): Teacher's Handbook. Peace Corps Language Handbook Series.
- Author
-
School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT., Clark, Raymond C., and Trussel, Stephen
- Abstract
This teacher's guide is designed to accompany the three Peace Corps students' books in Kiribati, the language of the Gilbert Islands. Its goal is to help the native speaker understand the American volunteers' viewpoints and to provide detailed information on methods and techniques for teaching the volunteers the language and culture. The guide has three parts: (1) an introduction explaining the purpose and organization of the course; (2) a discussion of teaching techniques, which includes an introduction to the students' books and detailed techniques for the various parts of those books; and (3) lesson notes for the "Communication and Culture Handbook" and the "Grammar Handbook." (AMH)
- Published
- 1979
39. Kiribati (Gilbertese): Communication and Culture Handbook. Peace Corps Language Handbook Series.
- Author
-
School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT. and Trussel, Stephen
- Abstract
This Kiribati communication and culture handbook presents 40 situations in which the volunteer is likely to be involved in the Gilbert Islands, and establishes classroom activities that require the students to exchange messages in a way that is appropriate to the cultural context. Most of the lessons are divided into "basic material" and "supplementary material" sections. Generally there are seven parts to each lesson: (1) objective, (2) basic material and translation, (3) cultural usage notes, (4) class activities, (5) outside activities, (6) references, and (7) vocabulary worksheets. An English-Kiribati glossary completes the volume. (AMH)
- Published
- 1979
40. Kiribati (Gilbertese): Grammar Handbook. Peace Corps Language Handbook Series.
- Author
-
School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT. and Trussel, Stephen
- Abstract
This grammar handbook analyzes the rules of the Kiribati language and provides exercises on them. It is divided into 40 lessons. The first part of each lesson is a description of some part of the language, with examples; the second part is made up of oral and written exercises. Answers to the written exercises are provided at the end of the book, as well as appendices containing the old system of higher numbers, numeral classifiers, and an English/Kiribati glossary. (Author/AMH)
- Published
- 1979
41. Kiribati: The Search for Educational Direction in a Pacific Context.
- Author
-
Hindson, Colin
- Abstract
An overview of the development of educational policy in Kiribati, a Pacific island nation, is presented in this paper. The decade of the 1970s was a period of tension between educators, economists, planners, parents, and politicians. These sectors interacted in shaping educational policy regarding government's financial responsibility for primary education, the number of required years of school attendance, curriculum and other issues. This debate reflected a growing public demand for universal education (at least through 6 years of primary school) and for a curriculum that prepared students for island life. In contrast, the government felt that there was no need, in economic and manpower terms, to provide better schools, and that universal primary education could only be achieved at great cost to the community. Over time, policies began to change gradually. The government's financial investment in schools increased, although many primary schools continued to charge fees. By mid-decade, consensus was reached on a policy that recognized the increased demand for secondary education and the need for a curriculum relevant to those students not continuing their schooling. The Community High Schools project was a pilot program undertaken in 1977 to experiment with a way of meeting the demand for "life preparation" courses for students not intending to pursue academics. The history of this scheme demonstrates the attempts made to reconcile in public education policy the tensions and pressures that existed among various sectors. Resolution of the tensions inherent in educational change were achieved, not through reports, reviews, and commissions, but through adaptation and consensus. The paper concludes by examining directions in educational policies in the 1980s. (KH)
- Published
- 1983
42. Regional Meeting of Pacific Islands Women's Non-Governmental Organizations.
- Author
-
South Pacific Commission, Noumea (New Caledonia).
- Abstract
Papers presented at a 1985 regional conference of the Pacific Islands Women's Non-Governmental Organizations are provided in this document. Each paper reports on a different country and discusses developmental issues relating to women's role, such as medical programs, health, social status and welfare, education, employment, and other subjects. The nations discussed include: (1) French Polynesia; (2) the Marshall Islands; (3) Western Samoa; (4) Palau; (5) Wallis and Futuna Islands; (6) the Cook Islands; (7) the Northern Mariana Islands; (8) Niue; (9) Papua New Guinea; (10) Fiji; (11) Guam; and (12) Kiribati. (KH)
- Published
- 1985
43. Millennium Island: Creating a Storyline about Geography and Time.
- Author
-
Liebert, Doris K.
- Abstract
Focuses on the storyline strategy which uses the components of a story (setting, characters, and plot) to organize concepts in a lesson. Provides a lesson on the Kiribati new year celebration using the storyline strategy. Offers alternative ideas for a storyline unit on Kiribati. (CMK)
- Published
- 1999
44. Single-dose rifampicin leprosy chemoprophylaxis for household contacts in Kiribati: An audit of a combined retrospective and prospective approach
- Author
-
Campbell, Patrick O, Bauro, Temea, Rimon, Erei, Timeon, Eretii, Bland, Caitlin, Ioteba, Nabura, Douglas, Nicholas M, Cunanan, Arturo, and Chambers, Stephen T
- Published
- 2024
45. Characterizing pathways of seafood access in small island developing states.
- Author
-
Seto, Katherine L, Friedman, Whitney R, Eurich, Jacob G, Gephart, Jessica A, Zamborain-Mason, Jessica, Sharp, Michael, Aram, Erietera, Tekaieti, Aritita, Tekiau, Aranteiti, and Golden, Christopher D
- Subjects
Environmental Sciences ,International and Comparative Law ,Law and Legal Studies ,Environmental Management ,Zero Hunger ,Humans ,Fisheries ,Seafood ,Ethnicity ,Food Supply ,Health Status ,Kiribati ,access mechanisms ,benefit ,food systems ,nutrition - Abstract
Ensuring healthy and sustainable food systems in increasing social, economic, and ecological change is a key global priority to protect human and environmental health. Seafood is an essential component of these food systems and a critical source of nutrients, especially in coastal communities. However, despite rapid transformations in aquatic food systems, and our urgent need to understand them, there is a dearth of data connecting harvested food production to actualized food consumption. Many analyses suggest institutional, legal, or technological innovations to improve food systems, but few have analyzed the pathways through which people already gain access to nutritious food. Here, using a random forest model and cluster analysis of a nationally representative data set from Kiribati, we operationalize access theory to trace the flows of consumptive benefit in a fisheries-based food system. We demonstrate that the market access mechanism is the key mechanism mediating seafood access in Kiribati, but importantly, the highest seafood consumption households showed lower market access, pointing to the importance of non-market acquisition (e.g., home production and gifting). We reveal six distinct household strategies that employ different sets of access mechanisms to ensure high levels of local seafood consumption in different contexts. We demonstrate the impacts of these strategies on the composition of household seafoods consumed, stressing the need to support these existing successful strategies. Finally, we point to key policy and management insights (e.g., improved infrastructure, shifts in species management) that may be more effective in reinforcing these existing pathways than commonly proposed food system interventions.
- Published
- 2024
46. Sport Tourism and Local Sustainable Development in Small Island Territories: The Case of Kiribati
- Author
-
Molu, Kiali, Pratt, Stephen, Tarte, Sandra, Coates, Dennis, Series Editor, Van Rheenen, Derek, editor, Naria, Olivier, editor, Melo, Ricardo, editor, and Sobry, Claude, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. China will expand its influence in the Pacific
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Global trends and spatial drivers of diabetes mellitus mortality, 1990-2019: a systematic geographical analysis.
- Author
-
Zejia Xu, Jianheng Feng, Siyi Xing, Yin Liu, Yuting Chen, Jie Li, and Yunhui Feng
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,INDOOR air pollution ,DIABETES ,MORTALITY ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DEATH rate - Abstract
Objective: Diabetes mellitus is the leading cause of death worldwide, and multiple risk factors associated with diabetes mortality. Methods: Employing spatial statistics, we characterized the spatial distribution and patterns of diabetes mortality, and revealed the spatial relationship between diabetes mortality and 11 socioeconomic and environmental risk factors at the country level, from 1990 to 2019. Results: Globally, significantly high rates of diabetes mortality were primarily clustered in countries with limited land areas or located on islands, such as Fiji, Kiribati, Eswatini, and Trinidad and Tobago. Countries with weaker economic independence are more likely to have higher diabetes mortality rates. In addition, the impact of socioeconomic and environmental factors was significant at the country level, involving health expenditure, number of physicians, household and ambient air pollution, smoking, and alcohol consumption. Notably, the spatial relationship between diabetes mortality and ambient air pollution, as well as alcohol consumption, showed negative correlations. Countries with high diabetes mortality rates generally had lower levels of ambient air pollution and alcohol consumption. Conclusion: The study highlights the spatial clustering of diabetes mortality and its substantial variation. While many risk factors can influence diabetes mortality, it’s also essential to consider the level of these factors at the country level. Tailoring appropriate interventions based on specific national circumstances holds the potential to more effectively mitigate the burden of diabetes mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. 'Sometimes, men cannot do what women can': Pacific labour mobility, gender norms and social reproduction.
- Author
-
Petrou, Kirstie and Withers, Matt
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL norms , *SOCIAL reproduction , *SOCIAL status , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *FAMILIES , *INTERGENERATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Australia's 2018 introduction of the Pacific Labour Scheme (PLS) broadened the scope and duration of labour mobility pathways available to Pacific Island countries. Although longer term temporary migration schemes like the PLS expand livelihood opportunities for migrant households, they also create challenges related to the maintenance of personal relationships and care practices during transnational family separation. Though pressing concerns for Pacific Island governments, these issues have received little scholarly attention. Drawing on in‐depth interviews with migrants and their households in Kiribati, Tonga and Vanuatu, this article offers some preliminary insights into the way gender norms intersect with the reorganization of socially reproductive labour during migration. Findings indicate that women were disproportionately involved in the performance of additional unpaid care work within migrant households adjusting to transnational family life, but also suggest that women's participation in labour mobility may offer nascent opportunities to increase financial autonomy and social standing through the act of 'remitting care'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Botanical remains of the last 1800 years from Tarawa, Republic of Kiribati, reveal ancient aroid (Cyrtosperma merkusii and Colocasia esculenta) pit cultivation and other cultigens.
- Author
-
Horrocks, Mark and Thomas, Frank
- Subjects
- *
TARO , *BREADFRUIT , *PALYNOLOGY , *MORINDA citrifolia , *PHYTOLITHS - Abstract
Recent advances in the study of the antiquity and development of ancient Pacific Island agriculture have been made at sites across much of the region by the application of a range of microfossil techniques, namely analysis of pollen, phytoliths, and starch. Unlike in Melanesia and Polynesia, the application of these techniques in Micronesia is limited. Here we report on microfossil analysis of Micronesian archaeological pit deposits from Tarawa atoll, in the Gilbert Islands (western Kiribati), covering the last 1,800 years. Results show local pit cultivation of Cyrtosperma merkusii and Colocasia esculenta. Together with microfossils of other subsistence taxa, namely Cocos nucifera, Morinda citrifolia, and Pandanus tectorius, and 14C dated macrofossil charcoal of Artocarpus altilis, the evidence is consistent with the atoll subsistence tradition of Remote Oceania. Because plants have differential production and preservation of pollen, phytoliths, and starch, the study shows the value of using combined analyses of these microparts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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