Title: Global Learning for a Global Society
1Global Learning for a Global Society
- Dr. Douglas Bourn
- Director,
- Development Education Research Centre
- Institute of Education, University of London
2Aims of Paper
- Context of Global Society
- Changing role of education within this global
society - Young People and Globalisation and Making Sense
of the World Around Them - Response of education system and teachers
- What learning for a global society looks like
- How it is delivered
3Global Society
- Globalisation impact at a economic, social,
cultural and political level - Changing nature of economies means skills
required also changing - Impact of new technology
- Social mobility and migration
- Sense of dislocation from traditional cultural
roots - Future of the planet- climate change and
sustainable development
4Changing Role of Education Within This Global
Society
- Role of markets in determining nature and form of
education - But Global skills for 21st century need to take
account of complexity, uncertainty and insecurity - Education has to be more global in outlook take
account of different perspectives and approaches - Education must however recognise that dominant
ideas in Western societies towards poorer
countries still one based on paternalism and
charity mentality.
5Young People and Globalisation
- Social Networking Facebook
- Dominance of western global cultural influences
yet young people do not simply absorb this
information - Being a Cyberflanuer
- Complex and multiple identities
- Want to learn and experience the wider world
- Need knowledge, skills and values base to
critically engage with issues concerning the
wider world
6Response of Education System
- More than just learning about developing
countries and global issues- important though
this is. - Skills and competencies to critically understand
and engage with the issues - Question and develop their own value base in
response to discussions on global poverty, social
inequality and cultural differences. - Above all equipping young people to be active
citizens of their society and wider global society
7Strategies for Taking Forward these idea
- Across Europe governments, voluntary
organisations and the European Commission are
supporting initiatives to equip education systems
to more effectivelt engage in learning for a
global society - Example of Ireland
- These difficult questions (of inequality and
injustice internationally) lie at the heart of
the work that is now needededucation for world
democracy, for human rights and for sustainable
human development is no longer an option.
Education has a central role to play, especially
if we are to build a widespread understanding and
ownership of this (development) agenda
(Development Education Ireland
8Global Citizenship
- For Oxfam, the global citizen is
- is aware of the wider world and has a sense of
their own role as a world citizen - respects and values diversity
- has an understanding of how the world works
economically, politically, socially,
culturally, technologically and environmentally - challenges social injustice
- participates in and contributes to the community
at a range of levels from the local to the
global - is willing to act to make the world a more
equitable and sustainable place - takes responsibility for their own actions
(Oxfam,2006).
9Focus of Strategies
- Learning that is linked to building public
understanding and support for international
development - Learning to be a global citizen
- Education for Sustainable Development
- Learning for a Global Society
10What this Learning for a Global Society Looks
Like
- Knowledge about global processes, causes of
poverty, sustainable development and their
relationship to peoples everyday lives - Skills to critically assess range of views and
perspectives on these issues - Engage in dialogue and re-appraisal of own views
and outlook - Forms and nature of the learning should take
place in a participatory form- starts from needs
of the learner and takes them on a exploratory
journey.
11Key Issues and Challenges
- Recognition dealing with controversial issues
- Challenging preconceived notions and stereotypes
in many cases - Encouraging critical thinking may lead to young
people wishing to go beyond traditional forms of
learning - Interdisciplinary nature of the learning.
12FIRST THREAD KEY ELEMENTS
OTHER
SELF
PerceptionsRelationships
GE
PerceptionsRelationships
PerceptionsRelationships
Perceptions and relationships ways of being,
seeing, knowing, relating, thinking, saying,
listening, etc.
WORLD(S)
This model was based on a working group
discussion of the conference Global Education
in Nuremberg on 9 October 2007.
13Key elements
OTHER
SELF
- DIFFERENCE
- INTERCONNECTEDNESS
- DIALOGUE
- POWER/KNOWLEDGE
- IDENTITY
- CULTURAL BAGGAGE
- LENSES
- POWER/KNOWLEDGE
WORLD(S)
- SOCIAL PRACTICES
- HISTORIES/IDEOLOGIES
- STRUCTURES/PROCESSES
- POWER/KNOWLEDGE
14Second Thread Aim and Context
Structured, ordered and stable, predictable,
comprehensible as a whole, universal meanings and
interpretations
To absorb information, to reproduce received
knowledge, to accept and adapt to existing
structures and models of thinking, knowing and
being
Fixed content and skills to conform to a
predetermined idea of society
EQUIPPING learners to PARTICIPATE together in a
GLOBALISED WORLD.
To assess, interrogate and connect information,
to generate knowledge, to live with difference
and conflict, to shift positions and perspectives
according to contexts
Complex and changing, uncertain, multifaceted
and interconnected, different meanings and
interpretation
Concepts and strategies to address complexity,
difference and uncertainty
Andreotti, De Souza and Mackay, 2007
15Concluding Thoughts
- We have an educational and social responsibility
to equip young people for the global society of
the twenty first century - This requires new forms of knowledge, new skills
and a re-appraisal of own ideas, experiences and
skills. - Strategies be they developed by governments. NGOs
or educational bodies need to recognise that it
is not a question of adding more knowledge and
information or just encouraging people,
especially young people to take action - Requires instead a recognition from all
stakeholders involved in development and
education to recognise that it is essential for
our 21st societies to equip people to be active
and informed citizens that includes an
understanding of global and international
development processes.
16Final thought
- We have no choice- it is a difficult journey but
an exciting one because if we go even a small way
in this direction our societies could well be
more open, inclusive, tolerant and socially
responsible
17- Thank you
- d.bourn_at_ioe.ac.uk