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| HOME > THE ISSUES | ||||||
| Introduction by Sharon Kagan and Vivien Stewart |
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As the comments above clearly indicate, increasing global interdependence, though a dominant feature of our age, has, until recently, been a neglected aspect of American education reform. What many know intuitively— but have not dared to admit — is that American students’ knowledge of other countries, cultures, and languages has not begun to keep pace with the escalating importance of this knowledge to our nation’s economic prosperity and national security. While shocking, this situation has some obvious explanations. In the past, for example, complex international transactions were the domain of diplomats and international policy and business experts. Educators were remote from the international agenda. Despite periodic calls for more internationalized content, international education was simply not seen as germane to the needs of most Americans, except in intermittent periods of national crisis. Today, however, globalization is driving demand for an internationally competent work force. New security challenges require greater proficiency in world languages, and the increasing diversity in our nation’s classrooms and workplaces necessitates a greater understanding of other cultures. Ensuring basic academic skills for all students, the major focus of education reform over the past decade, is certainly fundamental, but looking ahead in a rapidly globalizing world, we must consider what other knowledge and skills will be important to students’ success as workers and citizens in the 21st century. Among these will certainly be international knowledge and skills. Defining
International Education
We do not see international education as an additional, separate subject, but rather as an emphasis that is integrated into all the major curriculum areas. Addressing
International Education In the first part of this special section, the issues are examined from several different perspectives. First, two former governors, James B. Hunt, Jr., of North Carolina and John Engler of Michigan, discuss the connections between international education, economics, and democracy. Then two educators, Ted Sanders and Vivien Stewart, provide an overview of new developments around the U.S., highlighting approaches to international education that some American schools and states are already taking and exploring what state and national policies are needed to build capacity. Finally, noted communications researcher Susan Bales examines what the general public understands about this issue. The second part of this special section takes stock of how well American education is preparing students for the global age. We present articles on a number of different dimensions of this emerging field. With high school reform capturing increasing attention, Anthony Jackson outlines how a nascent network of international studies high schools aims both to promote 21st-century skills and to graduate more low-income students who are ready for higher education. Myriam Met examines the calls— coming primarily from outside the education system— for new thinking about the scope of foreign language education and synthesizes the research on what would make foreign language instruction more effective. James Kelly argues that teaching about the world must become a required element of teacher preparation and analyzes the systemic issues that need to be addressed. Finally, since students may be learning more about world regions and issues outside the school than inside, articles by Ellen Wartella and Gary Knell and by Linda Roberts discuss ways in which media and information technology can transform the ways in which students learn about other cultures and, indeed, our very notions of the classroom. As we grapple with ways to promote international education, many questions remain unanswered. In the third part of this special section, we guest editors step back and offer our reflections on how this critically important field — one that lacks textbooks, a codified research base, dependable funding streams, and major professional capacity— can move forward. We suggest that in order for IE to assume its justified role in education, a rethinking of the intent of education in the 21st century is in order. The special section concludes with a guide to organizations and resources that support international education. Our goal in the articles that follow is to take honest stock of where American schools stand with respect to promoting international knowledge and skills and to share some promising efforts. We make no claim to be inclusive of all the efforts taking hold throughout the U.S., but we do raise some critical issues for consideration. We aim to provoke conversation and to generate interest in what we regard as one of the nation’s truly “high-stakes” issues, perhaps one of the most neglected issues of our time. SHARON LYNN KAGAN is Virginia & Leonard Marx Professor of Early Childhood & Family Policy, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY, and VIVIEN STEWART is vice president for education programs, Asia Society, New York, NY. |
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