Volume One brings together international perspectives to critically examine how Waldorf (Steiner) education was received and understood in academic and public discourse during its formative years, from 1919 to 1955. Spanning six countries—Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, Austria, and Finland—the book challenges the historical view of Waldorf as a uniformly “progressive educa…
An assessment framework defines the design and intent of an assessment by mapping the structure of the assessed curriculum and clarifying what it aims to measure. For example, the TIMSS framework outlines content domains in mathematics and science for grades 4 and 8, paired with cognitive domains—knowing, applying, and reasoning—to guide item development.
This open‑access volume investigates the synergy between artificial intelligence (AI) and education, highlighting its transformative potential on teaching and learning. It presents a creative engagement framework, spanning foundational theory, practical K‑12 applications, and innovations in higher education.
This open-access volume examines how scientific, technological, and social transformations of the twenty-first century are reshaping educational theory. The first section explores philosophical and technological foundations; the second analyzes shifts in conceptions of humanity and society and their implications for educational paradigms; and the final section addresses practical dimensions—s…
This open-access volume offers a comprehensive review of the Gauteng Department of Education's (GDE) evolution over two decades, from 1994 to 2014. Comprising 15 essays by various specialists, the book examines the GDE's policies, resource allocation, and project implementations. It provides insights into the department's operations, decisions, and their consequences, presenting a balanced pers…
This open-access volume critically examines the evolution and future of technical universities as independent, single-faculty institutions. Tracing their origins from polytechnical schools established during the industrial era, the book explores how these institutions have adapted to shifts in national higher education structures, academic disciplines, and governance models.
This open-access book explores the unique terminology of school leadership in China, providing insights into its political, legal, financial, administrative, and cultural contexts. By analyzing key terms used in Chinese educational policies, laws, and school practices, the author offers a comprehensive understanding of how school leadership operates within China's educational system
This volume brings together 37 authors from 14 countries to examine how the social purposes of adult education are (re)interpreted across time and contexts—from the Global North to the Global South. Inspired by the inclusive, post-colonial vision of Lalage Bown
Changing the Course of AIDS offers an in-depth evaluation of a grassroots educational approach to mitigating the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Drawing upon six years of research in major South African workplaces, the author, David Dickinson, reveals how ordinary workers serving as peer educators can be as—if not more—effective at promoting behavioral change than traditional expert-led interventions. T…
Edited by Carl A. Grant, this volume examines the evolution of multicultural education research in the United States. It argues that multicultural perspectives have historically been marginalized within mainstream scholarship and seeks to bring these voices to the forefront.
This open-access volume examines rural school improvement initiatives across four developing contexts—China, Myanmar, Uganda, and Kenya. It investigates the challenges these rural schools face, the models and interventions applied to address them (such as teacher professional development, community partnerships, technology integration, and leadership training), and evaluates their effectivene…
This open-access book examines the intricate relationships between governance, evaluation, and knowledge within Swedish higher education. It delves into the origins, logics, and mechanisms of evaluation and quality assurance reforms, analyzing their dynamic interactions with institutional, national, and European policy contexts. Through extensive empirical studies, the chapters provide detailed…
Open Education: International Perspectives in Higher Education is an insightful collection of essays that explores how open education can democratize access to higher education globally.
This book presents a comparative analysis of Germany and Great Britain to demonstrate how national institutional frameworks influence the labor market outcomes of higher education graduates. It identifies four key institutional dimensions—higher education system structure, study content, graduate labor market organization, and labor market flexibility—that shape these transitions.
The Global South and Comparative and International Education proposes and elaborates on the construct of “Criticism against Northern Hegemony” within the field. The author, Charl C. Wolhuter, integrates diverse critical strands—including critiques of development theories, foreign aid regimes, globalization, neoliberal economics, racism, and calls for decolonization—to argue for the …
Dissens and Sensibility introduces the concept of a pedagogy of dissensus, an educational approach grounded in the disruptive and critical potential of art. Drawing on theorists such as Rancière, Biesta, Atkinson, and Eng, Lisbet Skregelid explores how art creates space for resistance to dominant norms, fosters new perspectives on self and society, and encourages democratic engagement through …
Education Systems and Inequalities explores how various national education systems shape and perpetuate social disparities. It examines mechanisms through which education systems generate unequal outcomes based on factors like social background, gender, ethnicity, migration status, and ability. Drawing on international comparative research, the book analyzes structural features—such as tracki…
This doctoral research explores how indigenous heritage is represented and taught in Caribbean school social studies, focusing on the Dominican Republic, Dominica, and Saint Kitts and Nevis. Through analyses of educational policies and classroom practices, Aguilar centers teachers' interpretations of heritage content, pedagogical methods, and their relationships with the past.
This interdisciplinary volume offers an authoritative account of modern Catholic educational philosophy, bridging education, religious studies, philosophy, and theology
This open-access monograph examines how Article 24 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)—which enshrines the right to inclusive education—has been implemented in two very different contexts: Nigeria and Germany. Despite formal commitment to inclusive education, both nations have paradoxically upheld segregated schooling systems: Nigeria due to a lack of fo…
This open-access book presents insights into the resilience strategies of at-risk vocational education and training (VET) students in the fields of learning, employment, and social integration across the Baltic countries and Norway. It investigates how VET can enhance the social inclusion of at-risk youth by combating school dropout rates and promoting transitions between various learning conte…
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of private supplementary tutoring, commonly known as shadow education, across 12 Arabic-speaking countries in the Middle East. It explores the educational and cultural commonalities among these nations, examining the drivers of demand and supply for shadow education, and assessing its impact on mainstream schooling. The study highlights the significan…
This open-access book explores the complex interdependencies between adult education, young adults in vulnerable situations, and active citizenship. It examines how adult education can engage and re-engage young adults, facilitating their life chances and social inclusion, thereby contributing to active citizenship within their societal contexts. The collection addresses social inclusion issues…
This book examines how schools and educational institutions have established new collaborative relationships in the competitive educational marketplace. Through case studies, it describes examples of collaborative structures, such as educational consortia, which serve as vehicles for professional and curriculum development, sources of mutual support, and conditions for mutual survival. As local…
This open-access study explores how Christian missionaries shaped Zambian and broader sub-Saharan African development across nearly a century. It traces missionary interventions in Western-style education and healthcare, highlighting how these services were delivered unevenly across gender and regions. By examining missionary legacies, the book reveals how inequities in educational access and r…
This volume presents a comparative study from the Precoll project, examining how regional governments across Europe—such as Catalonia, Andalusia, Tuscany, Wales, and Jämtland—can contribute to implementing lifelong learning strategies at the European level. Anchored in European cooperation and informed by Cedefop, the book assesses regional efforts and governance structures to support adul…
This collection of essays, emerging from dialogues within the National Forum on Higher Education for the Public Good, examines how universities can revitalize their role as civic institutions serving societal needs. It explores themes like governance, curriculum, faculty roles, leadership, and cross-sector partnerships. The contributors argue that higher education must shift away from market-dr…
This open-access volume investigates the impact of the COVID‑19 pandemic on global education systems and underscores the urgent need for large-scale reforms, particularly across the Global South. Building on a theoretical model of educational change developed by Reimers, the book delves into major reform initiatives implemented in five countries: India, Egypt, Taiwan, Vietnam, and Senegal, an…
This study investigates educational inequalities among children of Turkish immigrants in Austria, France, and Sweden. Despite being one of the largest immigrant groups in these countries, Turks face discrimination and limited opportunities, which are reflected in educational outcomes. The research highlights that educational mobility is more pronounced in Sweden, less so in France, and least in…
Education and Climate Change critically examines the role of education in addressing climate change, emphasizing the need for transformative learning to confront environmental and social challenges.
How the Computer Went to School critically examines over three decades of Australian government policies promoting computers as educational tools. Beale explores the origins and development of the computer industry in the United States and its influence on educational computing in both the U.S. and Australia
This open-access book provides an analysis of contemporary societies and schools shaped by cultural diversity, globalization, and migration. This diversity is necessarily reflected in education systems and requires the promotion of intercultural approaches able to improve learning processes and the quality of education. From an international and comparative perspective, this book first presents…
This open-access book explores the connection between peace education and historical memory, offering a fresh lens on the UN’s “sustaining peace” agenda
This open-access volume gathers essays from prominent scholars in the sociology of education and critical policy studies, inspired by Geoff Whitty’s lifelong pursuit of social justice.
“Education and Gender” presents a comprehensive, global examination of how gender shapes—and is shaped by—educational systems.
This book offers a clear, systematic overview of the adult and continuing education system in Belarus. Veramejchyk analyzes key elements including educational institutions, funding structures, program offerings, participation rates, staffing, and international cooperation. She situates these within Belarus’s political, geographic, cultural, and economic framework. Serving as an introductory g…
This open-access book examines how to support students in discovering purpose and agency in a rapidly changing world. Reimers offers a visionary, multidimensional framework for global education—spanning cultural, psychological, professional, institutional, and political perspectives—and integrates extensive empirical research. He presents concrete curriculum examples and global citizenship …
This scholarly volume grew out of a 2018 Education Deans Forum in Johannesburg and critically examines the dual discourses of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) and decolonisation in South African higher education. It explores how these discourses converge and diverge across epistemological, ontological, axiological, and methodological dimensions—sometimes competing for dominance in shapi…
This volume explores the growing significance and validation of non‑formal and informal learning across education, workplace, and society. Recognizing such learning is increasingly central to policy and research agendas worldwide, as a means to address skill gaps, support marginalized groups, and foster a knowledge-based economy
This edited volume offers a comparative analysis of adult education and lifelong learning across Europe and beyond. It draws on discussions from the 2015 Würzburg Winter School, examining educational policies, professionalization of adult educators, learner participation, quality assurance, and guidance and counselling in adult education. Each chapter delves into specific sub‑topics—such a…
This volume critically examines the complexities of implementing inclusive schooling across various African contexts, arguing that inclusion is neither instinctive nor guaranteed—it must be actively pursued. Drawing from diverse contributions on curriculum, pedagogy, representation, culture, school life, equity, and social justice, the book emphasizes questions of power, identity (class, gend…
This book explores how socioeconomic inequality affects educational outcomes, using two decades of data from the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS). It examines patterns across countries and over time, analyzing the relationship between students’ socioeconomic status and their academic performance. The authors provide evidence that educational inequality is persiste…
This edited volume investigates the transformative power of historical knowledge within teacher education, emphasizing the public history approach. It highlights how integrating historical perspectives helps pre-service teachers foster critical thinking, interdisciplinary awareness, and informed decision‑making. With historical understanding as both disciplinary knowledge and a transversal sk…
Critical Human Rights, Citizenship, and Democracy Education brings together a diverse, international body of scholars to treat human rights, citizenship, and democracy education as interconnected and critically examined fields. Through a blend of theoretical explorations and illuminating case studies, the book revisits these concepts from a justice-oriented lens, challenging the dominance of co…
Comparative Adult Education and Learning: Authors and Texts explores adult learning and education through a comparative research lens. It’s structured in two parts across four chapters: first, an analytical essay examining theoretical foundations and methods of comparison, followed by an anthology of key texts from diverse countries that illustrate varying perspectives, theories, and approach…
Coordination of Action in Adult Education Organizations (2024) explores how various actors across multiple levels in adult education systems collaborate to plan, manage, and deliver learning opportunities. Drawing on organizational theory, the volume brings together four empirical studies that highlight diverse actor constellations, coordination mechanisms, and context‑specific influences—f…
Creativity is explored as both an educational tool and a socio-cultural phenomenon across all phases of schooling—from early years to higher education. This open-access volume brings together empirically grounded case studies from diverse global contexts, each followed by critical reflections from international contributors. These conversational responses examine how creative methods can be a…
This open-access volume presents comparative snapshots of open and distance education across six national higher education systems—Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States . It traces the historical development, institutional structures, and evolving policies shaping ODE in each country, highlighting how digital transformation has influenced access, pedago…