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Maki Kato Samia Mafal Dwaine Lee John Phillips Christine Ashley Jenny Genge Kinsey
Dialogue Series Participatory
research, Kane argued, has evolved from earlier
systems of participatory rural appraisal. She
outlined the contribution that participatory
approaches have made in creating more inclusive
forms of participatory rural appraisal. She
outlined the contribution that participatory
approaches have made in creating more inclusive
forms of knowledge production. Because of its
practicality and appeal, PRA has grown popular with
development agencies throughout the world, yet it
is often practiced without deeper reflection on its
complex, and perhaps competing, philosophical
underpinnings. ABOUT EILEEN KANE: Eileen
Kane is an Irish anthropologist who has
worked around the world on participatory
research, especially applied to gender and
education of girls. She founded the first
department of anthropology in Ireland and
was professor there for 20 years. She has
worked extensively with organizations such
as the World Bank, as well as working with
PRA and development with Robert Chambers.
She then founded her own organization
which is a gender-focused research and
development organization called
GroundWork. She has been working on some
of the theoretical and philosophical
foundations of participatory research and
PRA and pushes at the edges of the
thinking about these trends. CIE
was well represented at the 44th annual meeting of
the Comparative and International Education Society
in San Antonio, Texas in March, 2000. Also
on the CIES program were: Slippery
Signifiers and Fertile Discourse: How do we know
the "Subjects" of (Education For)
Development? Educating
for Globalization: Comparing Policy Reform
Discourse in the U.S. and
India. Women
Executives in Higher Education Creating a Global
Perspective. Also
seen at the conference was Don Graybill (Ed. D.
1989; don@caii-dc.com). CIE
Members Present at Ethnography Conference Nine
CIE members from on- and off-campus participated in
the Comparative and International Education
Society's (CIES) Northeast Regional Conference on
February 5-6, 2000 in New York City. This year's
theme was "Equality of Educational Opportunity at
the Dawn of the XXI Century." Michael
Tjivikua, tjivikua@educ.umass.edu
Confucian
Education needs to transform itself to meet the
challenges of the modern world. Several valuable
insights in its learning pedagogy, e.g. learning
for one's self, moral education and several
related ethical issues, offer lessons for all
educators. This paper includes four components:
(i) What is said about Confucianism in our
current time; (ii) Confucian principles; (iii)
the dominance of Confucian education through the
centuries: a case in Vietnam; (iv) a need for
further research. Sue
Tatten, statten@educ.umass.edu "Democracy
and human rights" has been a catch phrase in the
international development field for the last
decade. Enormous resources have been directed at
establishing multi-party constitutional systems
in Africa but often overlooking the traditional
systems of democracy that function for the vast
majority of the citizenry. Local initiatives
have recognized the need for adapting a
perspective that melds traditional with modern
democratic principles and practices. This
presentation explored ways in which traditional
governance structures and modern systems of
governance are articulated and adapted at the
grassroots level in certain communities within
Ethiopia and Botswana. Implications for social
justice, equity, and education were also
explored. Sangeeta
Kamat, Asst. Professor skamat@educ.umass.edu The
neoliberal discourse on education reform
elaborated under the aegis of the World Bank and
IMF has centered around two principles -
privatization and decentralization. Each
principle has been positioned previously within
opposing agendas of education. While
privatization has traditionally always been
located within an agenda of exclusion,
decentralization has always been central to a
politics of inclusion. Within the current
discourse of globalization, these two principles
have been articulated together as a unified
whole. An analysis of the policy documents on
education reform reveals not only the
paradoxical nature of these principles but also
the ways in which they are discursively
represented as an integral whole - that is, each
as a logical extension of the other rather than
as contradictory. In this paper, I focus
primarily on policy reform documents that
pertain to Latin America to elucidate my
argument. Gabriela
Delgadillo gdelgadi@educ.umass.edu This
panel consisted of three comparative case
studies of educational reform in the new
millennium. The main focus was an analysis of
current reforms in public education within the
context of a globalizing economy. Three
different scenarios were presented that
highlighted this phenomenon in the U.S., Mexican
and Bolivian context at different levels of the
education sector (K-12, Higher Education,
Teacher Education). Thomas
Zschocke, zschocke@educ.umass.edu Making Books
About Ancient Civilizations
On
Saturday February 5th, 2000 thirty five teachers and
educators from Western Massachusetts participated in a workshop
sponsored by Global Horizons. The workshop, Making Books About Ancient
Civilizations, was facilitated by Susan Kapuscinski Gaylord. The
workshop focused on helping teachers engage their students in ancient
civilizations through the art of making books. Teachers
designing their own books The
teachers learned about the variety of ways ancient civilizations
preserved their knowledge and expressed themselves, from the clay
tablets of Sumer, the scrolls of Egypt and the slat books of ancient
China. Teachers made samples of the old forms, as well as newer
examples such as an accordion mummy book and a pyramid book from
ancient Egypt. Participants
in the Global Horizons Workshop The
participants were welcomed by Bob Miltz, Director of the Global
Horizons Program.
University of Massachusetts - April 2000
Miscellaneous Photos
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