Learner-centred education in developing country contexts: From solution to problem?

Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
Title
Learner-centred education in developing country contexts: From solution to problem?
Abstract
Learner-centred education (LCE) has been a recurrent theme in many national education policies in the global South, and has had wide donor support through aid programmes and smaller projects and localised innovations. However, the history of the implementation of LCE in different contexts is riddled with stories of failures grand and small. In coming to understand how LCE has been conceived, researched, and reported in relation to developing country contexts, a good starting point is the International Journal of Educational Development (IJED), where a wide range of articles on this theme has been published over the years. In all, 72 relevant articles were identified among the issues available on-line, comprising a weighty body of evidence concerning the nature and implementation of LCE. The vast majority are studies exploring the issues – and problems – of implementation of LCE-based programmes in particular settings. Emerging from these investigations is a variety of explanations for this perennial challenge: problems with the nature of reform and its implementation; barriers of material and human resources; interactions of divergent cultures; and the all-important questions of power and agency in the process. After a descriptive breakdown of the 72 articles, each of these implementation issues is explored in turn. The article considers the implications of this for future initiatives, research and scholarship in this area. The begged questions are: why do the same problems recur repeatedly, and how do we move beyond the normative ‘shoulds’ and the practical ‘can’ts’?
Publication
International Journal of Educational Development
Volume
31
Issue
5
Pages
425-432
Date
September 2011
Journal Abbr
International Journal of Educational Development
Language
EN
ISSN
0738-0593
Short Title
Learner-centred education in developing country contexts
Accessed
26/01/2015, 13:55
Library Catalogue
ScienceDirect
Notes

Extracted Annotations

"If we start by seeing teachers in changing contexts as individual learners, then message and medium need to be consistent." (Schweisfurth 2011:430)

Citation
Schweisfurth, M. (2011). Learner-centred education in developing country contexts: From solution to problem? International Journal of Educational Development, 31(5), 425–432. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijedudev.2011.03.005