ABSTRACT

The education of young people is context bound. This edited volume explores the contexts that characterise South and South East Asia and their influence on social studies education. There is not a single context across this broad geographical expanse, rather different religions, different political systems and different values exert influences that create distinctive programmes that characterise different countries. Yet there are also commonalities such as the post-colonial nature of most of the countries portrayed in this book, determined efforts at establishing new national communities and multiple value systems that lead to distinctive local priorities. There are also voices of resistance in these chapters, recognising the realities of local contexts but also recognising the need for change. Social studies education in these contexts may well be descended from its origins in North America, but in South and South Asian contexts, it has taken on new purposes, new forms and new values.

Education researchers, policymakers and postgraduate students in comparative education will find the volume useful in its exploration and comparison of the social studies curricular and reforms that shaped them.

section Section 1|14 pages

A theoretical perspective on social studies education

section Section 2|102 pages

Politics, culture and reform in South/South East Asian social studies education

chapter 3|16 pages

Developing loyal citizens

A case of social studies education in Pakistan

chapter 4|16 pages

Social studies education in Bangladesh

Contextual influences, reforms and development and curriculum

chapter 5|14 pages

Social studies education in Singapore

From cultural transmission to social transformation

chapter 6|15 pages

Social studies curriculum in Thailand

A contested terrain

section Section 3|104 pages

Social studies education in South and South East Asian classrooms

chapter 9|12 pages

Marginalised students and their contexts

A case from India

chapter 15|15 pages

Teaching history in Myanmar

Nation building or national reconciliation?

section Section 4|14 pages

Lessons from Asian contexts for social studies education