Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /

An important challenge for our world is to understand how cultural understanding and geographical education can be linked and used to improve the global society. We readily accept that our world is constituted by numerous groups of people who are organised by committees, tribes, regions, nations or continental entities. How these groups interact, show concern for each others' well-being and progress is still an unpredictable activity. Intercultural tensions, racial conflicts and religious clashes have all led to the challenges for enacting a constructive world. Fundamental perspectives challenge moderate ones, and the resulting tensions produce elements of fear, doubt and distrust. The extremist views of terrorist groups exaggerate these tensions to the extent that some different cultural groups do not prefer to live in peace with their neighbours. Deep-seated intercultural tensions predominate over peaceful co-existence. Such challenges may easily dominate the interaction between racial groups, tribes, indigenous peoples and colonisers. However, we know that through the sound practice of intercultural understanding, cultural groups in different contexts around the world can interact and co-exist successfully and productively. In fact, they can work together to seek to improve their society. This does not mean that one group will dominate the other. Rather, it means that both groups work together to improve their collective lives. Education has played an important role in the long-term achievement of such harmony. This volume has been developed to demonstrate that geographical education can be a potent force in the development of cultural understanding in different societies.

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Main Authors: Gerber, Rod. editor., Williams, Michael. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2002
Subjects:Social sciences., Curriculums (Courses of study)., Education, Science education., Human geography., Social Sciences., Human Geography., Curriculum Studies., Methodology of the Social Sciences., Science Education., Learning & Instruction.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1679-6
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id KOHA-OAI-TEST:181552
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Social sciences.
Curriculums (Courses of study).
Education
Science education.
Human geography.
Social Sciences.
Human Geography.
Curriculum Studies.
Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Science Education.
Learning & Instruction.
Social sciences.
Curriculums (Courses of study).
Education
Science education.
Human geography.
Social Sciences.
Human Geography.
Curriculum Studies.
Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Science Education.
Learning & Instruction.
spellingShingle Social sciences.
Curriculums (Courses of study).
Education
Science education.
Human geography.
Social Sciences.
Human Geography.
Curriculum Studies.
Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Science Education.
Learning & Instruction.
Social sciences.
Curriculums (Courses of study).
Education
Science education.
Human geography.
Social Sciences.
Human Geography.
Curriculum Studies.
Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Science Education.
Learning & Instruction.
Gerber, Rod. editor.
Williams, Michael. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
description An important challenge for our world is to understand how cultural understanding and geographical education can be linked and used to improve the global society. We readily accept that our world is constituted by numerous groups of people who are organised by committees, tribes, regions, nations or continental entities. How these groups interact, show concern for each others' well-being and progress is still an unpredictable activity. Intercultural tensions, racial conflicts and religious clashes have all led to the challenges for enacting a constructive world. Fundamental perspectives challenge moderate ones, and the resulting tensions produce elements of fear, doubt and distrust. The extremist views of terrorist groups exaggerate these tensions to the extent that some different cultural groups do not prefer to live in peace with their neighbours. Deep-seated intercultural tensions predominate over peaceful co-existence. Such challenges may easily dominate the interaction between racial groups, tribes, indigenous peoples and colonisers. However, we know that through the sound practice of intercultural understanding, cultural groups in different contexts around the world can interact and co-exist successfully and productively. In fact, they can work together to seek to improve their society. This does not mean that one group will dominate the other. Rather, it means that both groups work together to improve their collective lives. Education has played an important role in the long-term achievement of such harmony. This volume has been developed to demonstrate that geographical education can be a potent force in the development of cultural understanding in different societies.
format Texto
topic_facet Social sciences.
Curriculums (Courses of study).
Education
Science education.
Human geography.
Social Sciences.
Human Geography.
Curriculum Studies.
Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Science Education.
Learning & Instruction.
author Gerber, Rod. editor.
Williams, Michael. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Gerber, Rod. editor.
Williams, Michael. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Gerber, Rod. editor.
title Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
title_short Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
title_full Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Geography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] /
title_sort geography, culture and education [electronic resource] /
publisher Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 2002
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1679-6
work_keys_str_mv AT gerberrodeditor geographycultureandeducationelectronicresource
AT williamsmichaeleditor geographycultureandeducationelectronicresource
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1815522018-07-30T23:02:00ZGeography, Culture and Education [electronic resource] / Gerber, Rod. editor. Williams, Michael. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textDordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,2002.engAn important challenge for our world is to understand how cultural understanding and geographical education can be linked and used to improve the global society. We readily accept that our world is constituted by numerous groups of people who are organised by committees, tribes, regions, nations or continental entities. How these groups interact, show concern for each others' well-being and progress is still an unpredictable activity. Intercultural tensions, racial conflicts and religious clashes have all led to the challenges for enacting a constructive world. Fundamental perspectives challenge moderate ones, and the resulting tensions produce elements of fear, doubt and distrust. The extremist views of terrorist groups exaggerate these tensions to the extent that some different cultural groups do not prefer to live in peace with their neighbours. Deep-seated intercultural tensions predominate over peaceful co-existence. Such challenges may easily dominate the interaction between racial groups, tribes, indigenous peoples and colonisers. However, we know that through the sound practice of intercultural understanding, cultural groups in different contexts around the world can interact and co-exist successfully and productively. In fact, they can work together to seek to improve their society. This does not mean that one group will dominate the other. Rather, it means that both groups work together to improve their collective lives. Education has played an important role in the long-term achievement of such harmony. This volume has been developed to demonstrate that geographical education can be a potent force in the development of cultural understanding in different societies.Section 1: Introduction -- 1. Geography as an active social science -- Section 2: Geography and Culture -- 2. Geography as a cultural field -- 3. Geography, culture, values and education -- 4. Geography, technology and culture -- 5. Traditional medicine in Southeast Asia with special reference to Malaysia and Indonesia -- 6. Cultural interpretation and research in geography -- Section 3: Geography and Citizenship -- 7. Connectedness and self-meaning -- 8. Geography and the informed citizen -- 9. Active citizenship: empowering people as cultural agents through geography -- 10. Environment and citizenship: from the local to the global -- 11. Political geography, geographical education and citizenship -- 12. Geography and communities -- Section 4: Pedagogic Implications -- 13. Geography, culture and knowing: hybridity and the production of social and cultural knowledge -- 14. Public participation and the active, critical citizen: another view -- 15. New technologies and their impact on the culture of geography teaching and learning -- 16. Conflict management: the role of geographical education -- 17. Geography beyond the classroom: achieving cultural understanding through issue-based inquiry learning -- Section 5: Future Directions -- 18. Globalisation and Latin America: a fruitless search for balance -- 19. Geographical education and the challenge of lifelong learning.An important challenge for our world is to understand how cultural understanding and geographical education can be linked and used to improve the global society. We readily accept that our world is constituted by numerous groups of people who are organised by committees, tribes, regions, nations or continental entities. How these groups interact, show concern for each others' well-being and progress is still an unpredictable activity. Intercultural tensions, racial conflicts and religious clashes have all led to the challenges for enacting a constructive world. Fundamental perspectives challenge moderate ones, and the resulting tensions produce elements of fear, doubt and distrust. The extremist views of terrorist groups exaggerate these tensions to the extent that some different cultural groups do not prefer to live in peace with their neighbours. Deep-seated intercultural tensions predominate over peaceful co-existence. Such challenges may easily dominate the interaction between racial groups, tribes, indigenous peoples and colonisers. However, we know that through the sound practice of intercultural understanding, cultural groups in different contexts around the world can interact and co-exist successfully and productively. In fact, they can work together to seek to improve their society. This does not mean that one group will dominate the other. Rather, it means that both groups work together to improve their collective lives. Education has played an important role in the long-term achievement of such harmony. This volume has been developed to demonstrate that geographical education can be a potent force in the development of cultural understanding in different societies.Social sciences.Curriculums (Courses of study).EducationScience education.Human geography.Social Sciences.Human Geography.Curriculum Studies.Methodology of the Social Sciences.Science Education.Learning & Instruction.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1679-6URN:ISBN:9789401716796