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Is C ultural Diversity being sacrificed on the alter of Internationalism?

Is C ultural Diversity being sacrificed on the alter of Internationalism?. And if it is, what can we do about it?. Whats the Problem?. Every country has the goal of educating it’s citizens What about an education system that has no countries?

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Is C ultural Diversity being sacrificed on the alter of Internationalism?

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  1. Is Cultural Diversity being sacrificed on the alter of Internationalism? And if it is, what can we do about it?

  2. Whats the Problem? • Every country has the goal of educating it’s citizens • What about an education system that has no countries? • .the IB was seeking to design a genuinely international curriculum to meet all the various needs of those sixteen to eighteen year olds in international schools who were seeking entry to different forms of higher education all over the world

  3. What did the IB want to achieve? • It was then believed that those needs and interests included the moral, aesthetic, and practical education of the whole person and this extended far beyond the purely intellectual and academic preparation sanctioned by university entrance examinations (1980) • the IBO designed an educational program based on a philosophy that combines knowledge, experience, and critical observation. This philosophy emphasizes education as a process (learning how to think), not just a product (a collection of knowledge). (2009)

  4. Scotts valley Unified schools District – California - 2009 • The IB philosophy is to foster tolerance and inter-cultural understanding among young people through a specific method of teaching. This method of teaching, also known as a "curricular framework", incorporates critical thinking, problem solving, and exposure to a variety of viewpoints. The IB philosophy emphasizes: • Awareness of the similarities and differences among many cultures, understanding issues on an international scale, and responsible citizenship • The inter-relatedness of various disciplines and issues • A "Socratic" (question-and-answer) form of achieving knowledge in the classroom • Student-centered inquiry and communication

  5. Where does culture fit in this? • …schools do not view curriculum development as a ‘culture-bound’ process. • Is it the case that international education complements cultural heritage, i.e. that with-in all cultures there is an underlying schema of overall human values with an underlying commonality?

  6. Deciding what is appropriate

  7. Internationalism or cultural Diversity • Is it internationalism globalist, with stereotyped cultural ‘fossils’ that are conveniently appropriated for that process, thus marginalizing true multicultural practices? • Or is it culturally diverse, constructed in the context of the artist?

  8. Contemporary Practice or Not?

  9. Cultural Sensitivity • “Expression in the Visual Arts is characterized by forms of visual representation, that reflect the cultures of different societies.” It goes on to say.. “Art, including artistic theories and practices, is a cultural manifestation.” • “For students to communicate visually, they must locate themselves with-in the cultural context, or contexts, from which to discover and develop appropriate techniques”. Dip Visual Arts Guide 2002

  10. Changes in cultural viewpoints? • …the course encourages an active exploration of visual arts within the students’ own and other cultural contexts. The study of visual arts and the journey within it encourages respect for cultural and aesthetic differences and promotes creative thinking and problem solving.” - 2009 Diploma Visual arts Guide

  11. Cultural Imperialism or cultural Pluralism • The consideration of cultural objects from other times and cultures removes them from their source. It assumes that objects have values that transcend the cultures that made them. What these might be is either not stated or serve as a ‘sieve’ to suit the dominant cultures ends. In this context they become ‘cultural fossils’ that marginalize their value

  12. Why do we choose what we do? • These dominant traditions institutionally record what they think appropriate and omit, or deliberately forget, elements they don’t regard as important. • This attitude is used to fortify social, ethnic and national cohesion. For this reason certain memories and artifacts are deliberately chosen and promoted. Why else would a Sri Lankan student of the visual arts taught by a Sri Lankan teacher study Monet? Such an attitude tends to equate ‘positivist’ with ‘authoritarian’ and tends to be culturally specific. In the same vein, why value painting over other less specific art practices?

  13. Finding the common ground Leveling the playing field

  14. The IB Approach to Program Development

  15. Medium for the Message • Hard copy and .pdf publications • Area subject and Program workshops • Website Forums • On-line Curriculum Center OCC • Conferences • On-line training • Accreditation visits • Self Evaluations

  16. Issues and Problems • Cost of Travel for International Schools • Consistency of advice and direction • Complexity of the various guides • Lack of Access for constructive criticism • Lack of transparency in Assessment • Uncontrolled variety of interpretation of requirements • Complexity of planning tools • Uncertainty of boundaries between school content and IBO context • Danger of ‘textbooks’

  17. Learning management Models

  18. Learning Management Models

  19. An lms for Curriculum

  20. Changing Pedagogy with an LMS

  21. Learning Process Model

  22. A new view

  23. The IB Model – Using technology • Maintaining our cultural identity • How to create consistency using technology • The role of data and databases • Leveling the playing field for teachers without strangling them • Reducing the workload • Involving the students as ‘true’ learner participants • Increasing the validity of assessments both in-schools and in the framework • Using technology to involve the WHOLE school community • Recognizing we live in the 21st Century

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