Description
Based on an in-depth, ten-year study, this book examines the implementation of the large scale reform of Kazakhstan's education system.
About the Author
Colleen McLaughlin is Emeritus Professor of Education, University of Cambridge. She was Director of Education Innovation at the Faculty of Education, where she led the Education Reform and Innovation team. Her research interests include educational reform, school university partnerships for educational research, teacher development, and mental health in schools. Liz Winter is a Lecturer in Educational Psychology at the School of Education, University of Exeter. Apart from researching the impacts of educational reform, she is a chartered psychologist interested in how wellbeing is meaningfully constructed and measured in non-western contexts. Natallia Yakavets is an Assistant Professor in Educational Leadership and Management at the School of Education, Nottingham University. Her research interests relate to how processes of educational reform influence school leadership, teacher professional learning, and the quality of student learning along with inclusion.
Reviews
'Rarely do scholars look back to assess the impact of a reform ten or twenty years later. This book fills this gap: the distinguished authors examine how the Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools evolved over time and which of their key features were actually scaled up and adopted by regular public schools. Moving beyond mere description, this book is a very important contribution to comparative policy studies as it captures the fascinating new trend towards internationalization, typically first piloted in a few experimental schools of the country with the promise of infusing later on the innovations into the remaining public schools.' Gita Steiner-Khamsi, Professor and UNESCO Chair in Comparative Education Policy Teachers College, Columbia University, New York
Book Information
ISBN 9781009074483
Author Colleen McLaughlin
Format Paperback
Page Count 356
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press