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Education for a Knowledge Society in Arabian Gulf Countries

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This volume investigates the agendas and initiatives for using education to transition Gulf communities from being dependent on natural resources into knowledge societies. This volume presents info...
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  • 10 March 2014
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The worldwide shift towards a knowledge society and information based economy requires educational policy makers to re-evaluate their understanding of the knowledge and skills students need in order to achieve national development goals. This shift has influenced curriculum development, teacher preparation, and the role of formal schooling in creating lifelong learners and an educational culture, which reflects both national development interests and global norms. The Arabian Gulf countries, which largely comprise the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member countries, include Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Most of these Gulf countries have embarked on bold national experiments to pilot technology and teaching in their schools as a way to transition to knowledge societies. Their national interests and expectations have increasingly focused on the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) in education and both the regional and global context in which Gulf societies, economies, and political systems operate.
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Price: $193.99
Pages: 328
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Series: International Perspectives on Education and Society
Publication Date: 10 March 2014
ISBN: 9781783508334
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: EDUCATION / General, Educational strategies & policy, EDUCATION / General, EDUCATION / Educational Policy & Reform / General, Educational administration & organization
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Challenges to creating an Arabian Gulf knowledge economy. Philosophy, language policy and the knowledge society. List of Contributors. Education, development and sustainability in Qatar: A case study of economic and knowledge transformation in the Arabian Gulf. Building a knowledge society on sand – When the modernist project confronts the traditional cultural values in the Gulf. Education for a knowledge society in Arabian Gulf countries. International Perspectives on Education and Society. Education for a knowledge society in Arabian Gulf countries. Copyright page. From centralized education to innovation: Cultural shifts in Kuwait’s education system. The “Singapore of the middle east”: The role and attractiveness of the Singapore model and TIMSS on education policy and borrowing in the Kingdom of Bahrain. Postgraduate students’ perceptions toward online assessment: The case of the faculty of education, Umm Al-Qura university. New horizons of integrating ICTs in Egyptian initial teacher education. The impact of socioeconomic status on students’ achievement in the Middle East and North Africa: An essay using the TIMSS 2007 database. Making the transition to a ‘knowledge economy’ and ‘knowledge society’: Exploring the challenges for Saudi Arabia. University roots and branches between “glocalization” and “mondialisation”: Qatar’s (inter)national universities. Strategically planning the shift to a Gulf knowledge society: The role of big data and mass education. Preface. About the Authors. Subject Index. Challenges to creating an Arabian Gulf knowledge economy. Philosophy, language policy and the knowledge society. List of Contributors. Education, development and sustainability in Qatar: A case study of economic and knowledge transformation in the Arabian Gulf. Building a knowledge society on sand – When the modernist project confronts the traditional cultural values in the Gulf. Education for a knowledge society in Arabian Gulf countries. International Perspectives on Education and Society. Education for a knowledge society in Arabian Gulf countries. Copyright page. From centralized education to innovation: Cultural shifts in Kuwait’s education system. The “Singapore of the middle east”: The role and attractiveness of the Singapore model and TIMSS on education policy and borrowing in the Kingdom of Bahrain. Postgraduate students’ perceptions toward online assessment: The case of the faculty of education, Umm Al-Qura university. New horizons of integrating ICTs in Egyptian initial teacher education. The impact of socioeconomic status on students’ achievement in the Middle East and North Africa: An essay using the TIMSS 2007 database. Making the transition to a ‘knowledge economy’ and ‘knowledge society’: Exploring the challenges for Saudi Arabia. University roots and branches between “glocalization” and “mondialisation”: Qatar’s (inter)national universities. Strategically planning the shift to a Gulf knowledge society: The role of big data and mass education. Preface. About the Authors. Subject Index.