1st Edition
Changing Spaces of Education New Perspectives on the Nature of Learning
1. Changing Spaces of Education: An Introduction Rachel Brooks, Alison Fuller and Johanna Waters Section 1. International/Transnational Spaces of Education 2. Transnational Spaces, International Students: Emergent perspectives on educational mobilities Johanna Waters and Rachel Brooks 3. Constructing Transnational Higher Education Spaces: International branch campuses developments in the united arab emirates Kate Geddie4. Third Culture Kids: The global nomads of transnational spaces of learning Mary Hayden Section 2 New Policy Spaces of Education 5. Autonomy in the Global Era: Euro-regionalism and new policy spaces in education Laura C. Engel 6. "You Expect School to be the Happiest Times of their Lives, but it's Not": New policy spaces and the unattainable pursuit of equity Molly Warrington 7. School Building Redesign: Everday spaces, transformational policy discourses John Horton and Peter Kraftl Section 3. Lifelong Learning and Workspaces 8. New Places of Work, New spaces of Learning Alan Felstead and Nick Jewson 9. Bridging Institutional Divides: Linking education, careers and work in 'organizational space' and 'skill space' dominated employment systems Gunter Hefler and Jorg Markowitsch 10. The Spatial Dimensions of Workplace Learning: Acquiring literacy and numeracy skills within the worksplace Natasha Kersh, Edmund Waite and Karen Evans Section 4. Cyber-Spaces and Virtual Learning 11. (Im)mobilities and (Dis)locating Practices in Cyber Education Richard Edwards 12. Learning in an Open World Grainne Conole 13. Cyber-Spatial Mediations and educational Mobilities: International students and the internet Francis Collins Afterword
Biography
Rachel Brooks is Professor of Sociology at the University of Surrey, UK.
Alison Fuller is Professor of Education and Work at the Southampton Education School, University of Southampton, UK.
Johanna Waters is Senior Lecturer in the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK.
"This volume is not only thought provoking because it addresses the issues of space in education and learning, but also because it suggests venues for - much needed - theorising of these themes...The identification of issues becomes a call for theoretical efforts aimed at equipping scholars with the conceptual tools required to address them."
-- César Guadalupe, Lecturer and researcher, Universidad del Pacífico, Peru






