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Education and Development Education as a Human Right. Education and Development Education as a Human Right. Education and Development Education as a Human Right. How does Education relate to Society? Alternative approaches.
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Education and Development Education as a Human Right Education and Development Education as a Human Right
Education and Development Education as a Human Right • How does Education relate to Society? Alternative approaches. • Human Capital, Modernization, Dependency, Human Rights, Democratization • What has Education for All Achieved? • What are the limitations of EFA? • Assignment #1 Oct 17, Only ID#
Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Educational Institutions Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics
Transnational Context Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment National Context SubNational Context Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Education---Context • Thanks to a combination of revolutions, scientific and technological, social and economic, political and demographic, the environments of educational systems have been changing at a vastly accelerated pace.
Do you agree with the view that the context of education systems have been changing at a very rapid pace? • Yes • No
What is the most important education challenge today? • Expanding Access to Education to reach the unreached. • Improving Quality of Education. • Improving the Relevance of Education
Education---Context • Alternative ways to think about this relationship
Transnational Context Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings National Context SubNationalContext Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Education and Economic Development • Growth in Gross National Product • Patterns of Growth • Capitalizing on Comparative Advantages through Trade “Economic Development can be viewed as a set of interrelated changes in the structure of an economy that are required for its continued growth. They involve the composition of demand, production, and employment as well as the external structure of trade and capital flows. Taken together, these structural changes define the transformation of a traditional to a modern economic system” Hollis Chenery. Structural Change and Development Policy
Approaches to Educational Planning • Manpower Planning • Rates of Return Analysis
Education confers economic advantages to the people who are educated • Yes, Always • Yes, Generally • Sometimes • No, Rarely • No, Never
Education improves the economic productivity of people, hence improving national economic growth • Yes, Always • Yes, Generally • Sometimes • No, Rarely • No, Never
Transnational Context Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment National Context SubNational Context Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Education and Modernization • Cultural Values that allow Economic Progress • From Tradition to Modernity • Modern Values: • Control over one’s destiny vs. external forces • Respect for time vs. flexibility • Universal rules vs. particularism • Focus on achievement vs. ascriptive http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/
Weak vs. Strong Secular-Rational Values Source: Christian WelzelA Human Development View on Value Change Trends (1981-2006)
Weak vs. Strong Self-Expression Values Source: Christian WelzelA Human Development View on Value Change Trends (1981-2006)
An Underlying Constraint vs. Choice Polarity Source: Christian WelzelA Human Development View on Value Change Trends (1981-2006)
The Two-Dimensional Value Space in Theory Source: Christian WelzelA Human Development View on Value Change Trends (1981-2006)
Cohort Differences throughout Cultural Zones Cohort differences indicate a long-term increase of secular- rational and self- expression values in all cultural zones except Africa. Source: Christian WelzelA Human Development View on Value Change Trends (1981-2006)
Education develops modern values • Yes, Always • Yes, Generally • Sometimes • No, Rarely • No, Never
In the cases when education develops modern values • This is positive • This can be positive or negative • This is negative
Education and Dependency Theory • Some Economies never grow • Relationship of economic center to periphery • Role of elites • No capital accumulation but extraction • Relationship to Authoritarianism in Third World. • Liberation theory and conscientization. Alter class relationships through empowerment of the poor.
Education and Human Rights • Concentrate on all groups of society • Address regional disparities • Target elimination of poverty directly
Transnational Context Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment National Context SubNational Context Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Education and Political Change. Democratization Transnational Context Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment National Context SubNational Context Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Education as Social Reproduction • Education part of the superstructure of society. Can’t change the structure. Only reproduce. • Different education tracks • Social origin is social destiny
What theoretical approach do you think best captures the relationship between educational institutions and context? • Economic Development • Modernization • Dependency • Human Rights • Democratization • Social Reproduction
Does the approach we choose to represent how education and society relate matter in practice? • Yes • No • I don’t know
Five Definition of Literacy 1. ability to read and write 2. the ability to read, write, spell, listen, and speak 3. reading and writing at a level adequate for communication, or at a level that lets one understand and communicate ideas in a literate society, so as to take part in that society. 4. 'Literacy' is the ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate, compute and use printed and written materials associated with varying contexts. 5. Literacy is understanding, using and reflecting on written texts to enable an individual to achieve his or her goals, to develop his or her knowledge and potential, and to participate fully in the wider society
Does it matter which definition one adopts? • Yes • No
Literacy is understanding, using and reflecting on written texts to enable an individual to achieve his or her goals, to develop his or her knowledge and potential, and to participate fully in the wider society • Economic Development • Modernization • Dependency • Human Rights • Democratization • Reproduction
Transnational Context Economic Context Structure of the Economy Comparative Advantage Productivity Employment Why do States Intervene? Because they believe schools can change context Make people more productive Make people less poor Make people more modern Make people more democratic Because it provides legitimacy to the State Presence of the State Deliver symbolically on the democratic ideal Equality of Opportunity Why do Transnational Institutions Intervene? Cultural Context Identity Values Norms Shared meanings National Context SubNationalContext Political Context State—representation Governance State legitimacy Stability Rule of Law Social Context Status Hierarchies Individual-Society Educational Institutions Demographic Context Demographic Structure Demographic Dynamics Geographical Context Natural Endowments Human-Environmental Issues
Universal Declaration of Human Rights • Creation of UNESCO • Expansion of 1950s-1960s • Crisis of Education 1970s • Economic Recession and Adjustment 1980s • Education for All • Jomtien 1990 and Dakar 2000
The Six Goals of EFA • Goal 1: Expand early childhood care and education • Goal 2: Provide free and compulsory primary education for all • Goal 3: Promote learning and life skills for young people and adults • Goal 4: Increase adult literacy by 50 per cent • Goal 5: Achieve gender parity by 2005, gender equality by 2015 • Goal 6: Improve the quality of education • UNESCO has been mandated to lead the movement and coordinate the international efforts to reach Education for All. Governments, development agencies, civil society, non-government organizations and the media are but some of the partners working toward reaching these goals. • The EFA goals also contribute to the global pursuit of the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), especially MDG 2 on universal primary education and MDG 3 on gender equality in education, by 2015. • The Fast Track Initiative was set up to implement the EFA movement, aiming at "accelerating progress towards quality universal primary education".
Has EFA Made a Difference in Educational Opportunity? • Yes • No
EFA put primary emphasis on quantitative growth and little if any emphasis on qualitative transformation to adapt to the changing needs • Yes, I agree • To some extent • No, I disagree with that statement