Essays about: "Border Pedagogy"
Found 4 essays containing the words Border Pedagogy.
-
1. Peruvian Trainee Teachers as Mestizas. Pedagogies of Tolerance and Respect Towards Gay and Lesbian People
University essay from Lunds universitet/Graduate SchoolAbstract : Given the polarized political context in Peru that was provoked by the inclusion of LGTBIQ+ identities in the official school curriculum, this study analyzes the meanings that students of pedagogy in Lima ascribe to tolerance and respect towards gay and lesbian people, and how these meanings inform their pedagogical practices. Based on two focus groups and eight individual interviews grounded in standpoint theory, this study engages in a dialogue with the work of Wendy Brown regarding tolerance. READ MORE
-
2. A White Orphan’s Educational Path in British India : A Postcolonial Perspective on Rudyard Kipling’s Novel Kim
University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för språk (SPR)Abstract : In this essay Rudyard Kipling’s novel Kim (1901) is dealt with from a postcolonial perspective, and the aim is to show how three father figures - Colonel Creighton, Mahbub Ali and the lama - individually influence Kim’s education. Furthermore, how their point of view on education and parenting can be used to understand the larger concepts of postcolonialism and the pedagogy of Empire. READ MORE
-
3. Projekt Reggio : en inspirationskälla
University essay from SLU/Dept. Of Landscape Architecture, Planning and ManagementAbstract : A preschool with the Reggio Emilia approach to education is a grateful model for cross-border cooperation. The approach is based on a strong belief in human possibilities, a deep respect for the child and a conviction that everybody is born rich and intelligent, with a strong force to explore the world. READ MORE
-
4. Structuring of Modern and Postmodern Identities with Reflections on the Pedagogical Implications in a Multicultural World
University essay from Lunds universitet/PedagogikAbstract : This essay explores the different discourses that intersect to define and explain the concept of "identity" and consists of two distinct parts. The former being an attempt to eclecticize the discourses around identity and the structuring of identity under modern and post-modern conditions. READ MORE