ABSTRACT

A battle is being waged in classrooms and capitals around the world over the goals and objectives of the future of global education. While there is growing research in the area of global education, much remains to be uncovered, challenged, and learned through sound empirical research and conceptual explorations. What type of global citizens will schools promote? What types of policies, programs and instructional practices best promote effective global citizenship? Will global education curricula advance an unwavering loyalty to neoliberal ideologies and interests over the strengthening of human rights and the environmental health of our planet? This volume presents a series of research studies and innovative instructional practices centered on advancing global learning opportunities and literacies.

The authors in this volume initiate a much needed conversation on ways students in multiple contexts can and should learn with the world and its people. Part I addresses global education in theory, with a particular focus on development, intercultural competence, and global citizenship. Part II addresses educational programs and practices that foster global learning and action to help build a better future for all citizens of our planet – including experiential education, university initiatives, and conceptual approaches to teaching and learning. This scholarship spans four continents in a multitude of educational contexts – primary, secondary, and tertiary - each with a focus on a different dimension of the possibilities and pitfalls in teaching about and with the world and its people.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

The State of Global Education: Learning with the World and Its People

part I|49 pages

Global Education in Theory

chapter 2|14 pages

A Pedagogy of Development Education

Lessons for a More Critical Global Education

chapter 3|14 pages

Global Aspects of Citizenship Education

Challenges and Perspectives

chapter 4|20 pages

Global Education in Theory

The Centrality of Intercultural Competence

part II|128 pages

Global Education Programs and Practices

part Section 1|49 pages

Experiential Education

chapter 5|15 pages

On the Modern Silk Road

A Case Study of the Limits and Promise of International In-Service Teacher Professional Development

chapter 6|14 pages

Teacher Conceptualizations of Global Citizenship

Global Immersion Experiences and Implications for the Empathy/Threat Dialectic

chapter 7|19 pages

Globalization and Teacher Education

Teaching about Globalization through Community-Based Inquiry

part Section 2|41 pages

University Initiatives

chapter 9|20 pages

Discussions within Online Learning Formats

Are Meaningful Encounters with Difference Possible?

part Section 3|35 pages

Conceptual Approaches to Teaching and Learning

chapter 10|19 pages

Learning from 21st-Century International Schools

Global Education That Is Action-Oriented, Globally Connected, and Inclusive

chapter 11|15 pages

A Values-Based Pedagogical Stance

Teaching Teachers for Global Education in Australia