Course Description:

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EDUCATION 597 (1-3 Semester Hours)

DIRECTED INDEPENDENT STUDY IN COMPARATIVE EDUCATION

Course Description:

Involves investigation of specified topic in comparative education under faculty supervision. Areas of focus may include teaching strategies, theoretical approaches, assessment, evaluation models and utilization of technology. This course has been designed for education students participating in a study abroad experience.

Suggested Readings

:

Noah, Harold J. (1985). Comparative Education. In T. Hu sén & T. Neville

Postlethwaite (eds), The International Encyclopedia of Education. Research and

Studies . New York: Pergamon, pp. 869 – 872.

White, Bob W. (1996). Talk about School: education and the colonial project in

French and British Africa (1860 – 1960). Comparative Education, 32/1, 9 – 25.

Gaines, Kevin (1993). “Black Americans’ Racial Uplift Ideology as “Civilizing

Mission.”” In Amy Kaplan and Donald E. Pease (eds.), Cultures of United States

Imperialism. Durham: Duke University Press.

Baker, David & Gerald K. LeTendre (2005). National Differences, Global

Similarities. Stanford: Stanford University Press (chapters 1, 4, 11).

Kamens, David H., Benavot, Aaron (2006). World Models of Secondary

Education, 1960-2000. In A. Benavot and C. Braslavsky, eds., School Knowledge in Comparative and Historical Perspective. Hong Kong: Comparative Education

Research Centre and the University of Hong Kong, pp. 135-154.

Other texts as required.

Course Objectives:

Students may wish to independently investigate and research topics.

These could be topics not normally offered in the curriculum or topics in which students wish to go beyond the scope or limitations of a course. The independent study should not duplicate too closely existing courses and should be comparable in breadth, depth, and intellectual content to similar courses in its

discipline. Independent studies are designed to be campus based and include frequent consultation with the Faculty Director.

The primary mission of the Donald R. Watson School of Education at the

University of North Carolina at Wilmington is to develop highly competent professionals to serve in teaching and other educational leadership roles in southeastern North Carolina, the state, and nation. The Watson School is committed to achieving excellence in teacher and administrator preparation in all of its programs.

Course Requirements:

1. The student will submit evidence that the directed independent study enhances the student's understanding of the educational issues in one or more countries by presenting a seminar to the class and a written paper the length to be determined by the instructor.

2. The student and the instructor will agree in writing before registering for the directed independent study the scope and sequence of the work for this class.

3. Graduate students will submit a 10 page analysis paper tracing the historical development of education in the country of focus

Attendance:

Meetings to be determined by instructor and student.

Accommodations:

If you are a person with a disability and anticipate needing accommodations of any type in order to participate in this class, you must notify Disability Services

(Westside Hall, 962-7555), provide the necessary documentation of the disability and arrange for the appropriate authorized accommodations. Once these accommodations are approved, please identify yourself to me in order that we can implement these accommodations.

Grading

Grades may range from A to F as shown in the UNCW catalog.

Modeled after Gita Steiner-Khams

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