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Higher Education for Sustainability : Seeking Intellectual Independence in Aotearoa New Zealand / / by Kerry Shephard
Higher Education for Sustainability : Seeking Intellectual Independence in Aotearoa New Zealand / / by Kerry Shephard
Autore Shephard Kerry
Edizione [1st ed. 2020.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2020
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (69 pages)
Disciplina 378.931
Collana Education for Sustainability
Soggetto topico Environmental education
Higher education
International education 
Comparative education
Environmental and Sustainability Education
Higher Education
International and Comparative Education
ISBN 981-15-1940-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part 1 -- Chapter 1 About Higher Education for Sustainable Development and for Sustainability in New Zealand, and Elsewhere -- Chapter 2 Campus Sustainability -- Chapter 3 University Teacher as Critic and Conscience of Society -- Chapter 4 Environmental Education in New Zealand -- Chapter 5 Roles and Responsibilities for Higher Education in New Zealand, and Elsewhere -- Chapter 6 Global Perspectives and Competitive Individualism -- Part 2 -- Chapter 7 What Guides Our Beliefs and Actions? -- Chapter 8 On Deep, Critical and Independent Thinking and Why It Is So Challenging for Higher Education to Teach These Things -- Part 3 -- Chapter 9 Community Engagement and Higher Education’s Third Mission -- Chapter 10 Empowering Students in Higher Education -- Chapter 11 On Assessment and Evaluation, and Researching the Practices of Higher Education -- A Final Conversation with a Critical Friend.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910373885403321
Shephard Kerry  
Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2020
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Universities with a Social Purpose : Intentions, Achievements and Challenges
Universities with a Social Purpose : Intentions, Achievements and Challenges
Autore Shephard Kerry
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Singapore : , : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (164 pages)
Disciplina 378.015
Altri autori (Persone) SanthakumarV
Collana Sustainable Development Goals Series
ISBN 981-9989-60-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Authors -- 1: Prologue: Social Purpose, Challenges to Achievement, the Possibility of Universities with Specific Social Purposes, and a Response -- 1.1 Limitations of Conventional Universities in Meeting Specific Social Purposes and the Roots of the Desire to Have Universities with Social Purposes -- 1.1.1 Conventional Universities are Elitist, or Those Which Meet the Needs of Elites -- 1.1.2 The Perception That Conventional Universities are Inadequate to Meet Certain Social Needs -- 1.1.3 The Persistence of Poverty and Underdevelopment -- 1.1.4 Persistence of Marginalised Social Groups and Their Need for Higher Education -- 1.2 Universities with Social Purpose: Different Examples -- 1.3 Should There Be Universities for Social Purposes? What About Other Institutes? -- 1.4 Socioeconomic Challenges of the Universities with Specific Social Purposes -- 1.5 Idea Versus Implementation -- 1.6 Inadequate Resources -- 1.7 Lower Private Returns from Education for Social Purposes and the Consequent Challenges -- 1.8 Who May Seek Admission in Universities with a Social Purpose? -- 1.9 Who Becomes Teachers in Universities with a Social Purpose? -- 1.10 Homogenisation of the World Economy and the Consequent Homogenisation of Education -- A Response and Suggestions for the Structure of Our Book -- Reference -- References -- 2: Universities and Their Social Purpose -- 2.1 Purposes of Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Education and What Distinguishes University Education -- 2.1.1 Educational Sectors -- 2.1.2 Diversity of Higher Education in the UK, New Zealand and India in the Twenty-First Century -- 2.1.2.1 The UK with a Focus on England -- 2.1.2.2 The Structure of Education in India -- 2.1.2.3 Aotearoa New Zealand -- 2.2 The Idea of a University.
2.2.1 The Idea of an Undergraduate Degree, Intellectual Independence and Social Purpose -- 2.3 Theoretical Underpinnings for the Analysis of Social Purpose -- 2.4 Case Studies of Social Purpose in Action -- 2.4.1 On Widening Participation in Higher Education Institutions in England -- 2.4.2 How Is India's New Education Policy Attempting to Address the Challenges in India's Education? -- 2.4.3 Addressing Treaty of Waitangi Obligations and Demographic Inequities in Aotearoa New Zealand -- 2.5 Conclusions -- References -- 3: Participation, Social Mobility and Social Purpose -- 3.1 Higher Education and Social Stratification -- 3.2 Societal Ambitions to Widen Participation -- 3.3 Causes of Higher Education Elitism -- 3.4 Some Philosophical Considerations -- 3.5 How Societies and Universities Are Seeking to Widen Participation in Higher Education -- 3.5.1 Positive Discrimination -- 3.5.2 Addressing the Costs of Widening Participation -- 3.5.3 Systemic Changes within Universities -- 3.5.4 Rural Under-Developed Areas, Rural Doctors and Teachers, Bonds and Preferential Selection -- 3.5.5 Which Students Are Adequately Prepared to Participate in our Universities and What Should Universities Expect of Them? -- 3.6 Institutions with Special Social Purposes -- 3.6.1 Participation Trends in India -- 3.6.2 Early Efforts in Colonial India -- 3.6.3 Demands by Caste Groups -- 3.6.4 Teachers as Participants in Institutions with Specific Social Purposes -- 3.7 How Are We Doing So Far? -- References -- 4: Teaching in Universities and Specific Social Purposes -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 What Kinds of Teaching Would Be Useful for Specific Social Purposes: Historical and Current Educational Research and Development on Teaching for Social Justice -- 4.3 What 'Meaningful Education' Means in the Context of Universities' Social Purposes.
4.4 Some Examples of Teaching and Learning Programmes that Address Specific Social Purposes -- 4.4.1 Conventional Universities and Category B Students -- 4.4.2 What Institutions with Specific Social Purposes Are Attempting -- 4.4.3 Category A: Teaching Disciplines to Understand the Real Life of Students -- 4.4.4 Category A and B Students: Testing the Ability to Apply the Knowledge -- 4.4.5 Category C Students: Education Programs to Address Local Issues -- 4.4.6 Category A, B and C Students: Teaching Courses with a Specific Social Purpose -- 4.5 So, How Well Are Universities Managing to Address Their Social Purposes? -- 4.5.1 Research Approaches to Measure Change -- References -- 5: Research in Universities and Its Connection with Social Purpose -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Traditional Drivers for University Research and Their Links to Social Purpose -- 5.2.1 Research on Generalisable Insights and Its Usefulness for Specific Social Purposes -- 5.2.2 Ideology and Research for Social Purposes -- 5.2.3 Research in Conventional Universities Is Often Driven by the Need for Theory -- 5.2.4 What Determines Desirable Research Within Disciplines and Between Disciplines? -- 5.2.5 Quantitative Research Paradigms Dominate Some Research Fields But Limit the Research Questions That Can Be Asked -- 5.2.6 What About Consulting by Academics? Does That Help Specific Social Purposes? -- 5.2.7 Summarising Traditional Drivers for University Research and Their Links to Social Purpose -- 5.3 Specific Social Purposes and Knowledge Claims -- 5.3.1 Different Knowledge(s) in Different Contexts? -- 5.3.2 Do Specific Social Purposes, in Specific Educational Contexts, Also Involve Nurturing a Knowledge Which Is Different from That of Conventional Universities? -- 5.3.3 How Is Knowledge for Specific Social Purposes Valued and Used by Our Universities?.
5.4 The Impact Debate and Its Impact on the Social Purposes of Universities -- 5.5 What Could Be the Nature of Research in Universities with Specific Social Purposes? -- 5.5.1 Research to Connect with Practice -- 5.5.2 Using Research Skills for Social Purposes -- 5.5.3 Research for Specific Social Needs: A Few Examples -- 5.6 Conclusions -- References -- 6: Community Engagement and Social Purpose -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Service Learning, Internships, Placements and Field-Practice -- 6.3 Examples and Experience from India -- 6.3.1 Internships -- 6.3.2 Developing Links Between University Courses and Field Practice -- 6.3.3 Successes and Limitations -- 6.4 Educational Theorising About Community-Engagement -- 6.4.1 Co-construction of Knowledge and the Boundaries of Disciplinary Knowledge -- 6.4.2 How University People Conceptualise Their CE Activities -- 6.4.3 Service Learning, Community Service, and Changing the World in Your Own Time -- 6.4.4 Scholarship as a Framework to Understand University Teachers' Community Engagement -- 6.5 Social Change that Does Not Overtly Benefit from Engagement with Universities, But Perhaps Should -- References -- 7: Competitive Individualism, Intellectual Independence and Imagining some Alternatives and Consequences -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 What Are Critical Thinking and Intellectual Independence, in Broad Terms? -- 7.3 How Realistic Is it to Expect our Graduates to Always Think for themselves? -- 7.4 Is Intellectual Independence Context, or Discipline, Specific? -- 7.5 What Educational Objectives Might Be Incompatible with Seeking Intellectual Independence as the Principal Aim of Universities? -- 7.6 Concerns About the Development of Intellectual Independence as the Principal Aim of Universities -- 7.6.1 Liberalism -- 7.6.2 Individualism -- 7.6.3 Cultural and Linguistic Relativism.
7.6.4 Positioning Self-Interest, Competitive Individualism, Cooperation and Intellectual Independence -- 7.6.5 Does the Pursuit of Specific Social Purpose Require a Compromise on Intellectual Independence? -- 7.6.6 So, if We Are Serious About the Social Purposes of Universities, What Should We Be Doing About It? -- A Response from Santha -- References -- 8: Governance of Social Purpose -- 8.1 Kerry to Santha -- 8.2 Santha to Kerry -- 8.3 Kerry to Santha -- 8.4 Diverse Factors Contribute to the Decisions That Universities Make About What They Teach -- 8.4.1 Santha to Kerry -- 8.4.1.1 What Employers Want and How This Affects What Universities Teach -- 8.4.1.2 Academic Freedom of University Teachers -- 8.4.1.3 Disciplines Dominate University Teaching -- 8.4.1.4 Limited Resources -- 8.4.1.5 Postgraduate Specialisation, Vocational Learning and the Notion of the 'Ideal' in Conventional Universities -- 8.4.2 Kerry to Santha -- 8.5 Teaching Social Purposes May Need Changes in the Way Disciplines are Taught -- 8.5.1 Santha to Kerry -- 8.5.1.1 How We Teach What We Teach -- 8.5.1.2 Social Purposes May Need More Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary Learning -- 8.5.2 Kerry to Santha -- 8.6 Teacher Identity, Development and Progression -- 8.6.1 Santha to Kerry -- 8.6.1.1 Who Becomes Teachers in Universities and Its Impact on Teaching for Social Purposes -- 8.6.1.2 Practitioners as Teachers in Universities with Specific Social Purposes? -- 8.6.2 Kerry to Santha -- 8.7 What Is to Be Learned and Who Is to Teach It? -- 8.7.1 Santha to Kerry -- 8.7.2 Kerry to Santha -- 8.7.2.1 The Roles of Institutions with Specific Social Purpose in "Giving He to Students from Poorer and Marginalised Groups" -- 8.7.2.2 A "Social' (or Environmental) Orientation in All Students". How Would We Know? -- References -- 9: Epilogue.
9.1 A Brief Summary of the Ideas Developed in This Book.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910799235303321
Shephard Kerry  
Singapore : , : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui