4 research outputs found

    Is There a Potential for Norway to Learn from the Ethics Education in the Educational System of India?

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    The aim of this article is to contribute to the on-going debate about how the Norwegian educational system can meet increasing diversity in schools. The focus here is to investigate ethics education in the Indian educational system and thereafter discuss to what extent Norway can learn from India. The background study in India was carried out to clarify the justification for, content of and pedagogy for ethics education and draws attention to the intended as well as the implemented sector of education. The following discussion highlights the main findings from the background study and relates these findings both to the current discussion in Norway and to international research in the field. The article concludes that Norway would do well to consider what can be learned from the Indian approach to ethics education in order to meet the challenges of the increasing diversity in the Norwegian schools

    Det fleirkulturelle perspektivet i grunnskolelærarutdanningane

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    The article focuses on multicultural education in the Norwegian teacher education programs. We ask to what extent the student teachers experience achieving relevant competence. The findings indicate that the student teachers are relatively satisfied with the competence and skills they achieve. However, they ask for more specific knowledge about the pupils’ religious and cultural background. Knowledge about these factors could, according to the student teachers, be given through a compulsory element in the curriculum focusing on religion and culture. The findings seem to be in accordance with other researches which show that multicultural competence requires that the teachers have knowledge about the cultural background of the different minority groups. On the other hand, it seems like the students are not to any great extent aware that minority students tend to be overrepresented in special education and compensatory actions in schools. This finding indicates that there is a need for putting more emphasis on critical thinking with regards to multiculturalism in the teacher education programs in Norway, and an analytical approach in this context.Keywords: teacher education, multicultural education, critical multiculturalism, religion, culture, BanksNøkkelord: lærerutdanning, flerkulturell utdanning, kritisk multikulturalisme, religion, kultur, Bank

    Outcomes from international teaching placements – what’s in it for the receiving side? A case of Norwegian preservice teachers in Indian schools

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    International teaching placements are offered to students in many Initial Teacher Education institutions. The outcomes for preservice teachers in these international settings are widely researched and debated, but few studies focus on the experience of the receiving side. This article investigates outcomes for Indian cooperating teachers in eight schools after receiving cohorts of Norwegian preservice teachers on placement over a period of twenty years. Through an analysis of qualitative research interviews with twenty-one Indian teachers, the article explores how a host community perceives and assesses its outcomes from the placements. The article finds that the teachers view their outcomes mainly in terms of exposure to new and different pedagogical methods, and as personal enrichment through encountering a foreign culture. The impact on pedagogical practices or school culture however, seems to be minimal due to systemic differences and barriers
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