4. The term globalization is often used
to describe the growing integration
of economics worldwide through
increases in:
trade
flows,
investment
and technology transfer.
5. The term conveys
a sense that
international
forces are driving
more and more
developments in
the world.
6. Rinne (2000) emphasizes that
educational policy
has become an ever
more important
part of this
economic,
trade, labor,
and social
policy in
western
countries.
7. One concrete global development
is the development
of mega-universities,
university networks
and virtual
universities,
that can offer
competitive training
programs for students
recruited from all over the world.
9. It refers to an increasing
interconnectedness and convergence of
activities and forms of life among
diverse cultures throughout the world.
10. An education for globalization
should therefore nurture the
higher order cognitive and
interpersonal skills required for
problem finding, problem
solving, articulating
arguments, and deploying
verifiable facts or artifacts.
GLOBAL EDUCATION AND
GLOBALIZATION
11. Globalization, in some
ways, democratizes and
intensifies
interdependence and also
creates new forms of local
reaction and self-
definition.
EDUCATION SYSTEMS
constitute the core of the
globalization process
12. Globalization extends
students’ awareness of the
world in which they live by
opening them
to the diverse heritage
of human thoughts
and action, and
creativity places
particular emphasis
on the changes of
communication and
15. In seeking to
understand and
theorize the nature of
globalization and its
effects in education, it is
argued that
globalization has both
potentially negative as
well as potentially
positive effects.
17. Globalization is undoubtedly an
important constitutive
feature of the modern
world. One of the current
interdisciplinary
assumptions
is that globalization
necessarily amounts
to the loss of
cultural identity.
18. Philosophers may argue
endlessly about globalization,
but they can all agree that it
refers to an increasing
interconnectedness and
convergence of activities
and forms of life
among diverse
cultures through
the world.
21. Refers to the emergence of
worldwide financial
markets and better
access to external
financing for
corporate, national
and sub-national
borrowers.
2. Financial
22. 3. Political globalization.
Refers to the spread of
political sphere of interests to
the regions and countries
outside the neighborhood of
political actors and the
potential formation of a global
citizen movement
25. 6. Globalism.
Refers to the universal, internationalist
impulse that the world is connected. It
refers to the connection between
cultures, nations, and peoples; embodies
cultural diffusion, the desire to consume
and enjoy foreign products and ideas,
adopt new technologies and
practices, and participate
in “world culture”.
27. 1.Socio-cultural Issues
One of the paradoxes of
globalization is that difference is
becoming increasingly
normative. Globalization and
massive migrations are
changing the ways we
experience national
identities and cultural
belonging.
28. 2. Economic Issues On
Globalization
David Bloom argues that because
of globalization, education is
more important than ever before
in history. He deploys a vast array
of up-to-date data on the state of
global education in much of the
developing world.
29. Primary education
enrolments have improved
worldwide, consistency and
quality of education
experiences remain
“patchy”. Furthermore,
secondary
Education
in developing
countries remains
quite weak.
30. According to Bloom,
the challenges and
opportunities brought
about by globalization
include a more
competitive world
economy, the
increasing importance
of cross national
communication, and
the rapid speed of
change.
31. Globalization brings about
opportunities for
education, particularly in
the ways
that new technologies
can be put to work to
improve both the
quantity and quality
of education
32. “Education creates a capacity to
mitigate the disparities in the
world today that
are potentially very destabilizing,
both from economic and a
political point of view.”
-Bloom, 2004
33. 3. Political Issues on
Globalization
At the political level there has been the
constraint on national/state policy
making posed by the external demands
from transnational institutions.
35. While globalization has created
a great deal in economic policy,
and grassroots circles, many
applications and applications of
the phenomenon remain virtual
terra incognita.
The forces of globalization
are taxing youth, families,
and educations system
worldwide.
38. 2. The Fall Out of
globalization
a. Internationalization of
Globalization
b. Finance-related issues
c. Privatization of secondary
and higher education