Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 76 of 226)

Sandra Chistolini (2023). The Heart of the Citizenship Education and Revival of New Schools in Europe. European Journal of Education (EJED), v6 n1 p45-51. Our present time is characterised by many contradictions and the aspect of uncertainty indicates a sense of our deep loss of values. Education is the traditional space, in which generations create meanings and adults prefigure the future. Despite the idea of liquid modernity, which dominates our existence, we are convinced that we inherit meaningful testimonies of schools born in the spirit of the Reform from the pedagogic culture of the last two centuries. Schools, such as Dalton, Jena Plan, Decroly and Freinet, are still alive and bringing us a new message of citizenship education coherent with the impulse of their founders. Following our field study to investigate the reality of the Schools of Method in the areas of the Flanders and Brussels we were able to draw a solid concept of community. In the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, we assume that the modern western culture reaches its task to convert the dispute into tolerance. Citizenship education wishes to overcome any… [PDF]

Shapiro, H. Svi (2010). Educating Youth for a World beyond Violence: A Pedagogy for Peace. Education, Politics and Public Life. Palgrave Macmillan In a time of unprecedented social and economic crisis, this book represents a challenge to the orthodoxy that shapes the vision of educational purpose. It argues that now, more than ever, there is a moral imperative for educators to assume responsibility for helping to bring about a culture of peace and non-violence in both the nation and throughout the world as a whole. Shapiro has situated his vision of education in a broader quest for social and moral change. His framework is one rooted in the critical pedagogic tradition which sees education's primary purpose as nurturing democratic values, civic involvement, and a commitment to a more just and compassionate culture. The following chapters are included: (1) Giving Peace a Chance; (2) Truth and Violence; (3) The Violence of Invisibility; (4) Undoing the Narrative of Competition; (5) Justice then Peace; (6) Violence and the Crisis of Meaning; (7) Critical Citizenship; and (8) A Pedagogy of Peace…. [Direct]

Yablon, Yaacov Boaz (2010). Religion as a Basis for Dialogue in Peace Education Programs. Cambridge Journal of Education, v40 n4 p341-351 Dec. Religion could play a positive role in intergroup relations. However, this potential is usually overlooked and religion is often perceived as divisive and polarizing, perhaps even a source of intergroup conflict. This study examined religion as a possible tool for achieving positive intergroup encounters. A randomized control trial research design was used to study the contribution of religion to the enhancement of positive relations between Jewish and Arab high school students in Israel. The 255 eleventh-grade students were randomly assigned into three groups: encounters based on religious content, encounters based on social content, and a control group. Findings revealed that the religion-based intervention was more effective than the social-based one, which merely slowed down the deteriorating relationships between the groups. The results suggest that religion can serve as a common denominator for different national and social groups and be used for enhancing tolerance and… [Direct]

Altinay, Fahriye; Altinay, Zehra; Dagli, G√∂kmen; Karaatmaca, Ceren; Sakalli, √ñzge; Tlili, Ahmed (2021). The Role of Tolerance Education in Diversity Management: A Cultural Historical Activity Theory Perspective. SAGE Open, v11 n4 Oct-Dec. Tolerance education aims to promote the culture of peace and acceptance of others for well-being and diversity management. Therefore, it is important to create learning environments, content, and facilities for tolerance education in line with the universal values in education. However, little is known about how the literature investigated and summarized the findings related to tolerance education. Therefore, this study conducts a systematic review about this topic, where 75 reviewed studies were analyzed according to the Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) components. Findings highlighted that: (1) from the "subject" component, future research should involve more stakeholders, like parents and policymakers, when discussing tolerance education; (2) from the "object" component, tolerance education should not only focus on the physical environment, but also on the virtual environment; (3) from the "tools" component, limited digital tools and… [Direct]

Oded Zipory (2024). Educating for Radical Hope in Face of Rising Fascism. Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, v46 n3 p422-442. In recent years right-extremist ideologies, parties and regimes are gaining popularity and power all over the globe, and as days go by, hope for equality, freedom and peace seems more and more unrealistic, delusionary, perhaps even dangerous. To what goals and in which ways should one educate in a reality that offers no end in sight to oppression? And should educators be satisfied with the hope to merely slow down or temporarily pause what seems to be inevitable? In this essay, I show that educators and their students might get caught up in state of "stuckedness" (Hage, 2009), to which fascist hope and fascist unique temporalities offer relief. I argue that from this situation, a particular and strong kind of hope can arise — radical hope that is immanently transcendent and whose objectives are incomprehensible and cannot be imagined at present. Paradoxically and while difficult to attain, this almost desperate hope can free educators from the discursive and temporal… [Direct]

Hatley, Jenny (2019). Universal Values as a Barrier to the Effectiveness of Global Citizenship Education: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis. International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning, v11 n1 87-102. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO) approach to global citizenship education (GCE) includes a set of values termed 'universal values'. These social ideals include peace, justice and sustainability, and are normatively considered a common good. A multimodal critical discourse analysis of universal values within key UNESCO texts reveals that rather than moving societies towards genuine mutual human well-being, a central theme of GCE, universal values are counterproductive to the achievement of GCE. To enable GCE to achieve its aims, UNESCO needs to incorporate a diverse concept of values that allows for motivations and actions towards global citizenship more relevant to local contexts…. [PDF]

Bell, Karen (2022). Increasing Undergraduate Student Satisfaction in Higher Education: The Importance of Relational Pedagogy. Journal of Further and Higher Education, v46 n4 p490-503. How to increase student satisfaction is a question that Higher Education institutes have become increasingly focussed on. While previous research indicates a number of factors can contribute to student satisfaction, teaching has been found to be of high importance. This study interviewed students and staff in a UK university that had achieved high student satisfaction ratings in a national survey. The programme leader interviews (n8) and student focus groups (n20) discussed the teaching and learning behaviours that seemed to increase and decrease satisfaction levels. The study revealed new insights regarding the fundamental importance that students place on warm and respectful interactions with staff in the context of trusting relationships. The students particularly emphasised staff approachability, empathy, sensitivity and caring. The staff also thought relationships were important but put more emphasis on course organisation. Staff training and institutional evaluations which take… [Direct]

Rampal, Shelly; Smith, Sue Erica; Soter, Anna (2022). Wisdom in Higher Education: Discussions with Education Academics Utilising the "Bhagavad Gita". Qualitative Research Journal, v22 n3 p325-339. Purpose: In this paper we seek to provide insight as to how wisdom is, or might be, perceived and enacted in Higher Education contexts. Selected constructs of wisdom derived from the "Bhagavad Gita" provided a platform from which seven invited College of Education faculty participants considered their own framings of wisdom in the contexts of their own professional and personal lives. Design/methodology/approach: This case study has drawn upon constructs of wisdom proffered by key Indian scholars who share this epistemological stance. A three-stage process was deployed, comprised of an introductory close-ended survey, an open-ended questionnaire to determine personalised insights and semi-structured interviews to clarify and member-check the data. Findings: The participant academics' reflections offered a convergence on rich potential to pursue wisdom in Education and promote ethics, integrity, skilful action and inclusion. Furthermore, a general concern among the group of… [Direct]

Jaramaz, Milica; Krtolica, Milena; Marojevic, Jovana; Todorovic, Katarina (2023). "Only What's Right": Normalising Children's Gender Discourses in Kindergarten (the Case of Montenegro). Education as Change, v27 Article 11504. This article presents results from qualitative research on children's dominant gender discourses in kindergarten and the influence of the socio-pedagogical aspects of kindergarten culture, transmitted via teachers' gender discourses and personal epistemologies, on the construction of children's gender discourses and identities. The main questions guiding our research were: What gender stories are narrated in a group, and under which influences do these stories become established as norms? Our understanding of gender is based on the feminist poststructuralist perspective. Our research in two Montenegrin kindergartens with 54 children and four teachers during a two-week period showed a dominance of the binary opposition discourse of "hegemonic masculinity" and "emphasised femininity", with an emphasis on gender-stereotyped toys, games, role-play, and professions. Additionally, it has been found that the kindergarten culture strongly shapes and "normalises"… [Direct]

Bertolin, Julio (2018). Higher Education and Development in the Knowledge Society: From Integral Education to Substantial Positive Externalities. Higher Education for the Future, v5 n2 p122-141 Jul. Engendering well-being, peace and prosperity in a nation is a long-standing critical issue for possibly all countries worldwide. Many earlier hypotheses and formulas on how to generate 'wealth' have proven inadequate or failed. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the consensus was that the concepts of inclusive political institutions and inclusive economic institutions were crucial to development. However, with economic purposes, governments are increasingly prioritizing the acquisition of practical training and skills. This work argues that these policies are misleading. The integral education in higher education, especially by means of substantial positive externalities, can facilitate economic growth…. [Direct]

Tucker, Jan L. (1982). Internationalizing Global Education: A Professional Priority for the 1980s. The field of global education is being advanced by the development of programs for elementary, secondary, and university levels; the production and marketing of materials and classroom teaching strategies; and the creation of policy recommendations at national, state, and local levels. In addition, research efforts are underway. For the next level of development, global education needs to both deepen and broaden its perspectives to mature into a full-fledged domain of research and development. There is a need to reconstruct nation-centered education to fit a world where an ever-growing number of problems are beyond the capacity of individual nations to resolve. The framework for this cooperation has been developed by UNESCO and by other international organizations. Recommendations made for internationalizing global education involve the collection of information about global education, the creation of a professional organization, the meeting together of interested individuals in a…

Asmawi, Sumar'in; Kurnanto, Muhammad Edi; Sumin, Sumin; Zuchdi, Darmiyati (2023). Building Religious Character through "Suluk" on Multiethnic Students of Thariqah Al-Mu'min Community in West Kalimantan. Dinamika Ilmu, v23 n1 p135-156. The moral damage caused by the erosion of positive values and national character is quite concerning. This phenomenon has encouraged government concern through strengthening students' character. Strengthening students' character through formal education has not produced significant results, as evidenced by the many symptoms of moral decay and crime involving students in Indonesia. To overcome this, an alternative strategy is needed to elaborate between character education based on thoughts and hearts, which non-formal educational institutions can carry out. This research explores the "suluk" method as an alternative for forming religious characters for students who practice the Thariqah Al-Mu'min in West Kalimantan. This study uses a case study method and a qualitative approach. The research results found that; "suluk" can shape the religious character of students who practice the Al-Mu'min Order; these characteristics are; peace of mind, discipline, enthusiasm in… [PDF]

Dryden-Peterson, Sarah; Mulimbi, Bethany (2017). Pathways toward Peace: Negotiating National Unity and Ethnic Diversity through Education in Botswana. Comparative Education Review, v61 n1 p58-82 Feb. This study examines how education can disrupt threats of conflict, specifically in the presence of ethnic diversity. We present a historical analysis of Botswana, using methods of process tracing drawing on documents, in-depth interviews, and Afrobarometer survey data. Postindependence Botswana engaged in redistribution of educational access across ethnic groups and promotion of common civic principles of social harmony. At the same time, it constructed through schools ethnically based national identity, which excluded many minorities. Lack of recognition for ethnic minorities remains a persistent challenge, yet it exists in a context of high commitment to unity and the nation-state, even among minority groups, which may have allowed recent dissent to happen peacefully. The article defines mechanisms by which educational redistribution and recognition can disrupt resource-based and identity-based inequalities that often lead to conflict. This model holds promise for conflict… [Direct]

Cardozo, Mieke Lopes; Maber, Elizabeth; Paterson, Roseanne; Shah, Ritesh (2016). Peacebuilding, Education and Advocacy in Conflict-Affected Contexts Programme. UNICEF Programme Report 2012-2016. UNICEF Too many parts of the world are suffering from conflict and its repercussions. Millions of children and young people are at risk of not reaching their full potential. Before more decades of development efforts are undone and future progress is blocked, it is a moral obligation of society to collectively find ways to foster social cohesion among communities, resilience in systems and individuals, and a sense of security in daily lives. The Learning for Peace programme attempted to do just that. This Peacebuilding, Education and Advocacy in Conflict-Affected Contexts (PBEA) Programme Report summarizes processes, results and learning that occurred during the entire course of the PBEA programme–Learning for Peace–from 1 December 2011 through 30 June 2016. It draws extensively on reports produced by the 14 participating UNICEF country offices, five regional offices, a total of nine headquarters sections, units or divisions, and partners engaged in the programme. These documents were… [PDF]

Hussein, Izdihar J.; Mawajdeh, Baker S.; Rashaydeh, Mohammad S.; Talhouni, Mansour H. (2017). The Culture of Peace and the Prevention of Terrorism from the Perspectives of Islamic Education and the United Nations. Journal of Education and Practice, v8 n1 p43-56. Terrorism is an unfamiliar phenomenon to the Islamic religion and it is in opposition to its doctrine. It leads to the loss of innocent lives, destruction of properties, spreading rumors, terrorizing the innocents and destabilization. All this makes fighting and preventing the phenomenon of terrorism the duty of all human beings. This study aimed to highlight and clarify the concept of the culture of peace and the prevention of terrorism from the perspective of Islamic Education and the United Nations…. [PDF]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 77 of 226)

du Preez, Petro; Le Grange, Lesley; Maistry, Suriamurthee; Simmonds, Shan (2022). On Sustainability and Higher Education: Towards an Affirmative Ethics. Perspectives in Education, v40 n3 p118-131. Sustainable development has been the dominant focus in sustainability discourses over the past three decades. In 2015, the United Nations Member States adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development as a blueprint for peace and prosperity. The agenda is to be driven by the now well-known 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The higher education sector has not been left unaffected by these developments. In 2021, we saw Times Higher Education (2021) for the first time introducing its impact rankings, which assess universities against the United Nation's SDGs. This new category of the university ranking system may see universities increasingly account for their contributions towards both ecological sustainability and social justice. Paradoxically, higher education would have to embrace SDG targets as a social justice imperative, but within a neoliberal performance architecture and by applying the ethics of neoliberal market fundamentalism. In this article, we trouble the… [Direct]

Shibata, Masako (2022). Contested Memory of Okinawa's Colonial and War Past: History Teaching in and beyond Formal Education. Asia Pacific Journal of Education, v42 suppl 1 p73-87. This paper investigates the different ways in which the Battle of Okinawa in World War II is presented in and beyond formal education, using narratives and photos in Japan's state-authorized history textbooks and at a local museum. Specifically, this study examines 15 upper secondary school textbooks issued by six publishing companies from across the political spectrum and analyzes the narratives and photos used in these textbooks to depict and explain the Battle of Okinawa, together with the digital archives and official guidebook of the Okinawa Prefectural Peace Memorial Museum (OPPMM). The arguments and findings are three-fold. First, despite the line-by-line scrutiny of textbook contents by the state, individual textbooks show different narratives of the battle, and the monolithic view regarding the "Japanese textbook" is not sustained. Second, there are general differences of the battle's presentations between the school textbooks as a group and the OPPMM. Third, a… [Direct]

Robinson, Paul (1985). Henry Johnson and the Place of History in Education for World Peace. Social Education, v49 n2 p160-62 Feb. At the first independent meeting of the National Council for the Social Studies in 1935, Henry Johnson of Teachers College, Columbia University, delivered a speech entitled "The Place of History in Education for International Peace." What Henry Johnson said and the value of his ideas for today's teachers are discussed. (RM)…

Funke, Joachim (2021). It Requires More than Intelligence to Solve Consequential World Problems. Journal of Intelligence, v9 Article 38. What are consequential world problems? As "grand societal challenges", one might define them as problems that affect a large number of people, perhaps even the entire planet, including problems such as climate change, distributive justice, world peace, world nutrition, clean air and clean water, access to education, and many more. The "Sustainable Development Goals", compiled by the United Nations, represent a collection of such global problems. From my point of view, these problems can be seen as complex. Such complex problems are characterized by the complexity, connectivity, dynamics, intransparency, and polytely of their underlying systems. These attributes require special competencies for dealing with the uncertainties of the given domains, e.g., critical thinking. My position is that it is not IQ, but complex problem-solving competencies for dealing with complex and dynamic situations, that is important for handling consequential global problems. These… [PDF]

Shah, Syed Amir (2023). Higher Education, Neoliberalism, and Conflict: A Case of the University of Balochistan in Pakistan. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Loyola University Chicago. The current study focuses on the role of peacebuilding in the higher education sector of Pakistan's conflict-affected region of Balochistan. The research is an extended case study of the University of Balochistan. It addresses how the institution's peacebuilding agency has evolved in the face of ethnic conflict and the neoliberal reforms pursued by the state during the past two decades. The research is based on the study of policy documents, official reports, and individual and focus group interviews with various educational actors. The peacebuilding agency of the institution is theorized according to the 4Rs (Novelli et al., 2019; Novelli et al., 2017). The analytical frame of the 4Rs attempts to address the structural causes of conflict and theorize the role of education in relation to its role contributing to those causes. The analytical lens incorporates conflict's cultural, political, economic, and social dimensions and proposes a holistic strategy for building sustainable… [Direct]

Ford, Anne; Jackson Taft, Leanne; Woods, Kevin (2020). Educational Psychology Service Contribution to Community Cohesion: An Appreciative Inquiry. Educational Psychology in Practice, v36 n1 p1-16. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of a Child (UNCRC) calls for education to prepare children for ' … responsible life in a free society, in the spirit of understanding, peace, tolerance, equality of sexes, and friendship among all peoples, ethnic, national and religious groups and persons of indigenous origin'. The current study examines the potential role of Educational Psychologists (EPs) in addressing the UNCRC call to promote community cohesion through their work in schools. Through an Appreciative Inquiry cycle EPs considered facilitators of and barriers to working with communities. Facilitators included EP practices, skills and knowledge and seeing schools as communities in themselves. Barriers included public service funding and aspects of service delivery. A multi-level approach to promoting community cohesion is put forward, including acknowledgement of the context within which the work takes place as well as positing a continuum of community cohesion to community… [Direct]

Enu, Donald Bette (2016). Social Educators' Contribution in Educating for Peace and Security in Nigeria. Journal of Education and Practice, v7 n36 p97-103. For almost a decade, Nigeria has been facing serious peace and security challenges. The different ethnic nationalities have wedged one form of violent confrontation or the other against the federal government. Peace has been elusive. Beginning with the Niger-Delta militancy in the South-South to the on-going Boko Haram insurgency in the North East all bothered on agitations of marginalisation and unjust distribution of resources among the ethnic groups. This paper is a qualitative study carried out in Calabar Municipality of Cross River State of Nigeria. The sample involved 77 social educators purposively selected the University of Calabar, Cross River State College of Education and some selected secondary schools in the study area. Three research questions were posed and the respondents' responses formed the primary data for the study. The study was supported by the descriptive and analytical methods. From the responses, it was revealed that social educators by working in… [PDF]

Abrahams, Frank; de Quadros, Andr√© (2022). No Justice, No Peace: An Arts-Based Project with a College Choir. Music Education Research, v24 n5 p533-548. This study examined the changes in perception toward systemic racism of twenty-six first-year students at a mid-sized university in central New Jersey. All were members of the first-year choir and, with their conductor, participated in a three-week workshop called 'No Justice, No Peace.' The goal was to examine social justice issues and systemic racism in society and to produce multimedia works of art to express their changing attitudes. Reacting to prompts by the facilitator, they created original poetry, singing, movement, and visual art projects recorded and posted on YouTube for public viewing. Critical pedagogy, critical pedagogy for music education, and activist pedagogy provided the theoretical frameworks. Coding techniques from the grounded theory literature offered a structure for the data analysis. We invited four students from the choir to participate in open-ended interviews and to share their final projects. We found that the students had positive feelings about the… [Direct]

(1981). Peace and Justice Education. Current Issues in Catholic Higher Education, v1 n2 Win. Articles in this issue of "Current Issues in Catholic Higher Education" concern the results of pilot projects in peace and justice education at several colleges and universities, along with initiatives made at other institutions. In "Report on ACCU's Pilot Programs," David Johnson provides an overview of the experiences of the seven institutions that implemented pilot projects and a chart outlining by college the following areas: program focus, curricular focus, curricular initiative, experiential learning, other educational programming, spirituality, and governance. "An Outline of Justice Education Programs at Catholic Colleges and Universities," by Don McNeill further details the programs. The following articles on specific programs are included: "Villanova University: An Update," by Daniel Regan; "Manhattan College," by Joseph Fahey; "University of Dayton," by Phillip Aaron; and "Washington Area Peace Studies… [PDF]

Duffy, Gavin; Gallagher, Tony (2020). Schools, Communities and the Police — Shared Education as a Mechanism for Social Cohesion and Community Safety. Education and Society, v38 n2 p37-61 Dec. The relationship between the police and communities can be difficult in ethnically divided societies, especially if membership of the police force is largely drawn from one community. This situation pertained in Northern Ireland, which has separate schools for different religious communities. Despite a major reform of the police after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement (1998), the relationship between the police and the Catholic minority remained difficult and, in particular, the police found it difficult to engage with pupils in some Catholic schools. An education initiative, called Shared Education, was launched in 2006 to support the peace process by encouraging collaborative partnership between Protestant and Catholic schools. This paper examines a school partnership in Northern Ireland in which statutory and non-statutory organisations, including the Police Service in Northern Ireland, were involved. The paper examines how the relationship between the police and the… [Direct]

Radenovic, Ljiljana (2021). Education and the Good Life: Petrarch's Insights and the Current Research on Well-Being. Journal of Beliefs & Values, v42 n1 p95-109. According to Petrarch, the main goal of the liberal arts is to help us live a good life and become wise, virtuous, and serene. This is also something achieved via true Christian faith. In this paper, my goal is twofold. First, I review Petrarch's general attitude to the good life and the ways to live it, along with his advice on how to remain content or regain peace in the face of difficulties. As a devout Christian, Petrarch emphasises that faith suffices for a person to have a virtuous and contented life, but the combination of a liberal arts education and a Christian education is ideal. Second, I highlight the importance of Petrarch's insights, by taking a closer look at the contemporary research on the universal psychological needs and how their satisfaction relates to the overall sense of well-being of people across different cultures. Studies show that people who feel more autonomous generally have an increased sense of well-being. Furthermore, those who are 'mindful', that is… [Direct]

Albert√≠, M√≤nica; Amador-Campos, Juan Antonio; Casa√±as, Roc√≠o; Krieger, Virginia; Lalucat-Jo, Llu√≠s; Mas-Exp√≥sito, Laia (2022). Implementation of Whole School Restorative Approaches to Promote Positive Youth Development: Review of Relevant Literature and Practice Guidelines. Education Sciences, v12 Article 187. Positive youth development highlights the promotion of skills through engaging and caring settings and building opportunities for bidirectional and constructive relationships. Whole School Restorative Approaches (WSRA) promote school community relationships and social and emotional skills which are core components for positive youth development. To our knowledge, the literature reviews on the implementation of restorative practice approaches in schools do not focus specifically on WSRA and are not comprehensive. This study carries out a systematic review of the empirical evidence on the effectiveness of WSRA and develops some evidence-based practice guidelines on their effects. Thirteen studies met the inclusion criteria and we developed 10 evidence-based practice guidelines on the implementation of WSRA. There were many studies with WSRA showing positive results related to improving social and emotional skills and behavior. The highest level of scientific evidence is for secondary… [PDF]

Constantinou, Stavros T.; Morrison-Beedy, Dianne (2021). A Global Educational Experience between Geography and Nursing: Interdisciplinarity and Sustainability. Geography Teacher, v18 n3-4 p142-145. As the world becomes increasingly more interconnected and interdependent, it is a priority to expand approaches for students to learn within interdisciplinary environments so that students acquire a broader "team lens" needed for success in future employment and scholarship. Across the globe, part of the "common language" connecting professionals across disciplines has been the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). These seventeen interconnected goals serve as a blueprint for the nations of the world to address the ongoing challenges to peace and prosperity for people and the planet. The SDGs address interconnected broad issues ranging from ending poverty, addressing climate change, improving health and education, reducing inequalities, and spurring economic growth. Interdisciplinarity commonly refers to the joining of forces by two or more academic fields of knowledge. Several disciplines have participated in the process, and geography is no exception. Similarly,… [Direct]

Akbayrak, Nesrin; Ko√ß, Demet; Kuru, Nalan (2022). A Study on the Perception of Turkish and Syrian Children of Each Other in Preschool Period: "Tell Me about Your Friend". Education Quarterly Reviews, v5 spec iss 2 p65-78. This paper aims on revealing the perceptions of 5-6-year-old Turkish and Syrian children sharing the same classroom environment in a preschool education institution by use of metaphors. The study was designed in the phenomenology pattern, one of the qualitative research methods, and conducted with 34 Turkish and 22 Syrian children in the 5-6 age group who receive education in the same kindergarten. The study data were obtained through a semi-structured open-ended form and the content analysis method was used in the assessment of the data. The examination of the study data indicates that Turkish and Syrian children expressed several common metaphors such as 'tree, mother, sky, game, toy, playing, cat, mirror, dog'. However, children attributed different meanings to the metaphors they expressed in common. On the other hand, the study determines that Syrian children created more metaphors with positive meanings compared to Turkish children. The study has a very significant purpose in… [PDF]

Nuissl, Ekkehard (1994). The Increasing Importance of Adult Education in the Future of Europe. Adults Learning (England), v6 n1 p31-34 Sep. The emergence of the European Union challenges adult education, the aims of which are relevant to the union–peace, democracy, and human rights. Adult education must be made a priority beyond the narrow confines of vocational training. (SK)…

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