According to a Child Rights Information Network report, an estimated eight million children aged between six and Fourneen do not currently attend school in India. And these children are the ones the Right to Education (RTE) Act now promises to reach out and provide education to.To enforce this, a huge amount—to the tune of Rs 55,000 crore, according to an estimate by the Ministry of Human Resource Development—is needed. This is the primary hurdle for the Government of India is making this law become reality.
Monthly Archive for August, 2010
By Dave Murray, in Education News
Michigan schools are getting a $318 million boost from the federal government this year, but is that really a helping hand?
Experts speaking at an Education Commission of the States conference suggested schools used the time to start planning for when the cash by sharing services and combining their purchasing power — ideas discussed this week in or Michigan 10.0 series.
Alyson Klein of Education Week reports that school finance expert Michael Griffith told the recent gathering that states are becoming more and more dependent on the federal government, and that might not be a good thing, unless they don’t mind giving up bigger chunks of their authority.

We are accepting submissions for the 2011 volume of The International Journal of Learning.
The International Journal of Learning sets out to foster inquiry, invite dialogue and build a body of knowledge on the nature and future of learning. In do doing, the journal provides a forum for any person with an interest in, and concern for, education at any of its levels and in any of its forms, from early childhood, to schools, to higher education and lifelong learning — and in any of its sites, from home to school to university to workplace.
The journal is relevant for academics, researchers, teachers, higher degree students, educators and educational managers and administrators.
Refereeing of submitted papers will commence shortly so start the submission process early by submitting your proposal.
Paper submission guidelines and timelines are available online.
By Patricia Cohen, in The New York Times
For professors, publishing in elite journals is an unavoidable part of university life. The grueling process of subjecting work to the up-or-down judgment of credentialed scholarly peers has been a cornerstone of academic culture since at least the mid-20th century.
Now some humanities scholars have begun to challenge the monopoly that peer review has on admission to career-making journals and, as a consequence, to the charmed circle of tenured academe. They argue that in an era of digital media there is a better way to assess the quality of work.

The latest issue of The International Journal of Learning includes:
- Learning via ICT: ‘TELL ME MORE’ by Harwati Hashim and Melor Md. Yunus.
- Enhancing Graduate Courses through Creative Application of Cutting Edge Technologies by Irena Bojanova and Leslie Pang.
- Analysis of Personal Assumptions about Knowledge and Knowing by Multidimensional Visualization by Chiu-Ching Chen, Po-Wen Chiu and Ching-Yuan Chang.
- A Reparative Reading of a Confessional Narrative of ‘Inclusion’: Working within an ‘Ethic of Discomfort’ by Susan Sandretto.
- A Student-poet’s Story: The Paradox between Poetic Creativity and Moral Conformity by Ming-chun Sinn.
- An Evaluation of Impact of Low Vision Training Programme on use of Low Vision Devices in Primary Schools for the Visually Impaired Pupils in Kenya by John Ayieko Yalo and Francis Chisikwa Indoshi.
- New Media Design for Learning: An Argument for Curriculum Change by Marlo Steed.
- An Evaluation of the Achievement of Educational Learning Outcomes from the Perspectives of Employers and Graduates by Wai Ling Yung.
- Literacy Pedagogy and Multiliteracies in Greek Elementary School Language Arts by Anna Fterniati.
- Supporting the Learning Needs of Indigenous Australians in Higher Education: How can they be best achieved? by Michelle Trudgett.
- Mathematical Problem Solving and Self-Regulated Learning by Fatma Kayan Fadlelmula.
- Beyond the Walls – Learning to Teach Imprisoned Learners in Taiwan: A Pilot Program by Richard McFarlane and Paul S. Berg.
- Engaging Students as Evolving Professionals Using a Community-Integrated Research Project: Assessment as Learning by Annetta Kit Lam Tsang.
- Educational Online Social Networking in Greece: A Case Study of a Greek Educational Online Social Network by Katerina Glezou, Maria Grigoriadou and Maria Samarakou.
- The Issue of Equity in Higher Vocational Education (HVE) in China by Jie Xiong.
By Dale Singer in, St. Louis Beacon
What’s the best relationship between teachers and students? Love? Admiration? Respect?
What would you do if your class were deeply involved in a creative project, like a movie or a newspaper or a play, and the principal came along and said you had to get back to basics because standardized test time was coming up?
Those were the kinds of questions that teachers in Riverview Gardens faced over the summer when they wanted to get rehired for their jobs, after the district was taken over by a state-appointed board. For years, teachers around the country have been tested in the same way by the Haberman Star Teacher program, which tries to determine who is most likely to succeed in a school environment that seems to get tougher every year.

The third issue of Volume 17 of The International Journal of Learning has now been published.
Volume 17, Number 3 contains:
- Comprehending Real World Adolescent Issues through Adolescent Literature: Learner Perspectives from a Malaysian Institution of Higher Learning by Subarna Sivapalan, Ganakumaran Subramaniam and Azrai Abdullah.
- Motivational Style Adoption in Asian Chinese by Swati Suhaemi Kurnia.
- A Teacher Diary Study to Apply Ancient Art of War Strategies to Professional Development by David McLachlan Jeffrey.
- Effects of a Virtual Sign Animated Pedagogical Agent on ICT Learning by Benjaporn Saksiri and Pintip Ruenwongsa.
- Not Just an Innocent Flock of Sheep: Learning through a Walks and Talks Engagement Initiative at a Swedish Local Government by Peter Demediuk.
- An Exploratory Study of Online Social Networking within a Doctorate of Education Program by Denise Beutel, Larina Gray, Stephanie Beames, Val Klenowski, Lisa Ehrich and Cushla Kapitzke.
- Homework Problems: Do Students from Rural and Urban Schools Perceive Differently? by Yun Peng, Eunsook Hong, Xiayan Li, Min Wan and Yongzhong Long.
- Knowledge and Learning Capabilities in Nonprofit Organizations: A Relational Capital Perspective by Eric Kong and Mark Farrell.
- A Qualitative Study of Women of Creative Achievement by Susan Keller-Mathers.
- Effect of Cooperative Learning on Students’ Achievement at Elementary Level by Fareed Ahmad.
- The Factors that Facilitate and Impede Collaboration between Pre-Service Teachers During a Paired-Practicum in a School-Based Environment by Suzan Samimi-Duncan, Glen William Duncan and Julie Lancaster.
- Anchored Instruction: Its Potential for Teaching Introductory Management by Glen William Duncan and Geoff Bamberry.
- The Lesson Study Based Team Assignment Model for University Accounting and Business Students by Hadrian G. Djajadikerta.
- Developing Preservice Teachers’ Professional Identities and Establishing Collaborative Understandings about Teacher Education by Sarah Selmer and Meadow Graham.
- Engineering Technology Students’ Mathematics Beliefs and Attitude towards Mathematics by Siti Mistima Maat, Effandi Zakaria, Norazah Nordin and Mohamed Amin Embi.
Continue reading ‘Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 3 available’
To those of you that joined us at the 2010 Learning Conference in Hong Kong, or if you’ve participated in a previous conference, please share your photos of the conference with your friends and colleagues that you met while at the conference. Pictures of the conference sessions, dinner, tours and ‘down time’ are all welcome!
Join our Learning Conference Flickr group here, and upload your pictures to easily share. Once you’ve joined, simply click on ‘Add something?’, and upload your photos or videos of the conference.
For information on sharing your photos with Flickr, please read more here.
Multiliteracies, Multimodality and Teacher Professional Learning by Anne Cloonan is now available from The Learner imprint.
In the midst of an epochal shift in the communications environment, rapid cultural change and transformations in knowledge, there is an urgent need for bold educational responses. While responsibility for educational resourcing belongs to the broader community, the extent and quality of pedagogical change ultimately rests with teachers. Student learning is dependent on teachers developing knowledge and pedagogical practices. Central to our educational response to the changed environment is teacher professional learning.
This scholarly book draws on research which investigated the impact on teachers of their engagement with the New London Group’s multiliteracies theory. Four Australian teachers of primary school students committed themselves to exploring multiliteracies theory and to putting their learning into practice in diverse classroom settings.
Anne Cloonan, then a literacy policy and project officer at a state Education Department, explores the context, processes and impact of film-driven participatory action research action learning, in which the teachers researched their learning and practice over a period of eight months. She describes new ways of working shoulder to shoulder with teachers to develop resources and policy advice while deepening their professionalism. She offers contextualised examples of teachers extending their print-based literacy pedagogies to incorporate multimodal literacy practices.
This book will be of interest to teachers, educational consultants, policy makers, and researchers concerned with: agentive collaborative teacher learning; innovative policy and resource development; enhancing teachers’ professionalism; and the operationalisation of multiliteracies theory.
By David M. Herszenhorn, in The New York Times
Washington – The Senate on Wednesday cleared the way for a $26 billion package of aid to states and school districts, and the House speaker, , said she would summon members from their summer recess to grant final approval to the bill.
The measure had been hung up by partisan wrangling between Democrats, who said it was necessary to avert layoffs of teachers and cutbacks in services by strapped states, and Republicans, who objected to another round of government spending and characterized it as a political payoff to unions.
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