Current Issues in Comparative Education

Current Issues in Comparative Education

Volume 15(1) / Fall 2012 ? ISSN 1523-1615 ?

Education in Small StatES: FragilitiES, VulnErabilitiES, and StrEngthS

Editorial Introduction

5

Re-reading the Anamorphosis of Educational Fragility, Vulnerability, and Strength in

Small States

Tavis D. Jules, Special Guest Editor

Invited Articles: Re-conceptualizing and Re-reading Educational Developments in Small States

14 Meeting the Tests of Time: Small States in the 21st Century Godfrey Baldacchino

26 Learning from Small States for Post-2015 Educational and International Development Michael Crossley and Terra Sprague

Fragility in Small States: A Community-based Perspective

41 A Broader Definition of Fragility: The Communities and Schools of Brazil's Favelas Rolf Straubhaar

52 How to Make the Small Indigenous Cultures Bloom? Special Traits of S?mi Pedagogy in Finland Pigga Keskitalo, Satu Uusiautti, and Kaarina M??tt?

Vulnerability in Small States: An Institutional Perspective on Small Jurisdiction and Small Assemblages

64 Explaining Whole System Reform in Small States: The Case of the Trinidad and Tobago Secondary Education Modernization Program Jerome De Lisle

83 Small States and Big Institutions: USAID and Education Policy Formation in El Salvador D. Brent Edwards Jr.

Education Reform in Small States: A Comparative Perspective 100 Small State, Large World, Global University? Comparing Ascendant National Universities

in Luxembourg and Qatar Justin J.W. Powell

114 Overcoming Smallness through Education Development: A Comparative Analysis of Jamaica and Singapore Richard O. Welsh

132 Internationalization of Higher Education in Post-Soviet Small States: Realities and Perspectives of Moldova Valentyna Kushnarenko and Ludmila Cojocari

Case Studies of Educational Reform in Small States: A Cultural Perceptive

145 Inclusive Education in Bhutan: A Small State with Alternative Priorities Matthew J. Schuelka

157 Building on Living Traditions: Early Childhood Education and Culture in Solomon Islands Lindsay J. Burton

Book Reviews 176 Fragile States, by Lohar Brock, Hans-Henrik Holm, Georg S?rensen and Michael Stohl

Reviewed by Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams

178 Citizenship Education in Commonwealth Countries, by Tristan McCowan and Sonia Gomez Reviewed by Beth Wright

180 Education in Small States: Global Imperatives, Regional Initiatives, and Local Dilemmas, edited by Peter Mayo Reviewed by Janice B. Fournillier

182 Island Enclaves: Offshoring, Creative Governance, and Subnational Island Jurisdictions, by Godfrey Baldacchino Reviewed by Katherine G. Sammler

184 Enhancing Professional Practice: A Framework for Teaching, by Charlotte Danielson Education in Small States: Policies and Priorities, by Michael Crossley, Mark Bray, and Steve Packer Reviewed by Bradley A. Kirshenbaum

2 Current Issues in Comparative Education

186 Neither World Polity Nor Local or National Society: Regionalization in the Global South - The Carribean Community, by Tavis D. Jules Reviewed by Landis G. Fryer

188 Tertiary Education in Small States: Planning in the Context of Globalization, edited by Michaela Martin and Mark Bray Reviewed by Sophia Rodriguez

Current Issues in Comparative Education 3

CURRENT ISSUES IN COMPARATIVE EDUCATION Volume 15, Issue 1 (Fall 2012)

Special Guest Editor: Tavis D. Jules, EdD Loyola University Chicago

Managing Editor Associate Editors Assistant Editors Book Reviews

Andrew K. Shiotani Landis G. Fryer, Sophia M. Rodriguez, Beth Wright Yao Chen, Joy O' Keefe, Patricia Castillo, Brad Kirshenbaum, Terry Han Andrew K. Shiotani

INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD

Michael Apple, Mark Bray, Michael Cross, Suzanne Grant Lewis, Noel McGinn, Gary Natriello, Harold Noah, Gita Steiner-Khamsi, Frances Vavrus

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4 Current Issues in Comparative Education

Editorial Introduction

Re-reading the Anamorphosis of Educational Fragility, Vulnerability, and Strength in Small States

Special Guest Editor

Tavis D. Jules

Loyola University Chicago

The Raison d'?tre of Small States Research Not so long ago, across many disciplines, the study of small states was seen as a futile project since "small states have been rendered synonymous to chronically vulnerable and problematic territories for which aid, assistance and especially favourable deals are legitimate" (Baldacchino, 2012, p. 237). Yet within the past eighteen months we have seen a popular resurgence of educational research on small states in comparative and international education (CIE) with at least two publications in 2011 (Education in Small States: Policies and Priorities by Michael Crossley, Mark Bray and Steve Packer, and Tertiary Education in Small States: Planning in the Context of Globalization edited by Michaela Martin and Mark Bray) and one in 2010 (Education in Small States: Global Imperatives, Regional Initiatives and Local Dilemmas edited by Peter Mayo). Before this wave of contemporary comparative analysis, the last comprehensive analysis in CIE of educational developments in small states appeared in the Special Issue in Comparative Education in 2008, Comparative and International Perspectives on Education in Small States guest edited by Peter Mayo.

This Special Issue of Current Issues in Comparative Education shows the raison d'?tre of small states research is more pertinent now than ever, and challenges doubts over whether small state studies is still noteworthy as a category of analysis (see Goetschel, 1998; Baehr, 1974; Christmas-Moller, 1983). The numerous submissions for this Special Issue corroborate the expanded interest in the topic, which beseeches the question: What is now `novel' about small states that has drawn new attention from researchers? Perhaps an answer to this question rests in the economics of small states. Another ? although not unrelated ? answer could be the movement of small states from government to governance, driven by globalization and technology which call for innovation and inventiveness to partake in the knowledge economy. Indeed, globalization has changed the way small states are regulated since it creates both homogenization and new localisms as nation states are confined to particular spaces, topographies, and ecologies. Therefore, in a post-`global financial crises' era, this issue offers re-readings of the policies, performances, and practices of small states, and continues the resurgent discourse about what we can learn from them.

For some time now, small states research has been on an `empirical cliff,' where there is emergent curiosity about why these states are successful, but diminishing empirical research about what constitutes success. Historically, the overall narrative on education in small states focused on analyzing individual states and searching for comparative patterns. Several prior studies have tried to address the educational challenges in small states, falling into two categories: single country studies or geo-strategic/geo-hemispherical studies (such as the Commonwealth, countries, the Caribbean Community [CARICOM], and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations [ASEAN]). Within this issue, we have found new conceptualizations of small states that move away from "methodological nationalism" (Robertson & Dale, 2008) and provide unique

? 2012 Current Issues in Comparative Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Current Issues in Comparative Education 15(1): 5-13.

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