Creating a Learning Society : A New Approach to Growth, Development, and Social Progress /
Keywords
Information society.Progress.
Social learning.
Adult learning.
Critical pedagogy.
Information society.
Organizational learning.
Political Economics, other.
Progress.
Social learning.
Social Sciences.
Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie, Anthropologie.
Business & Economics
Social Science
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
https://doi.org/10.7312/stig17549https://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9780231540629.jpg
Abstract
Creating a Learning Society explains how the countries of the world went from centuries of stagnation to the enormous increases in standards of living that have marked the last two hundred and fifty years: they have learned how to learn. Yet, as Stiglitz and Greenwald make clear, markets won't succeed on their own in creating the learning society that we need. Achieving this requires good governmental policy in a variety of areas, including trade, industry, and intellectual property. Indeed, the central thesis of this book is that every policy--tax, regulation, and expenditure--affects learning, and that policymakers have been remiss in ignoring this. Some policies, such as the Washington Consensus policies foisted on developing countries by the World Bank and IMF, actually impede learning. In advanced and developing countries alike, Creating a Learning Society has had a remarkable reception. Governments in Malaysia, Singapore, Turkey, Jordan, and South Africa have signaled strong support for its policies, and a Dutch think tank closely allied with the government released a blueprint for creating a learning economy. This streamlined edition, intended for everyone from scholars to general readers, omits the original book's complicated mathematical equations and, in accessible language, focuses on its central messages and policy prescriptions.Creating a Learning Society explains how the countries of the world went from centuries of stagnation to the enormous increases in standards of living that have marked the last two hundred and fifty years: they have learned how to learn. Yet, as Stiglitz and Greenwald make clear, markets won't succeed on their own in creating the learning society that we need. Achieving this requires good governmental policy in a variety of areas, including trade, industry, and intellectual property. Indeed, the central thesis of this book is that every policy--tax, regulation, and expenditure--affects learning, and that policymakers have been remiss in ignoring this. Some policies, such as the Washington Consensus policies foisted on developing countries by the World Bank and IMF, actually impede learning. In advanced and developing countries alike, Creating a Learning Society has had a remarkable reception. Governments in Malaysia, Singapore, Turkey, Jordan, and South Africa have signaled strong support for its policies, and a Dutch think tank closely allied with the government released a blueprint for creating a learning economy. This streamlined edition, intended for everyone from scholars to general readers, omits the original book's complicated mathematical equations and, in accessible language, focuses on its central messages and policy prescriptions.
Electronic reproduction.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University, former chief economist and senior vice president of the World Bank, and former chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Clinton. His books include Making Globalization Work; The Price of Inequality: How Today's Divided Society Endangers Our Future; The Great Divide: Unequal Societies and What to Do About Them; and Fair Trade for All (with Andrew Charlton). In 2001, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics.Bruce C. Greenwald is Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Finance and Asset Management at Columbia Business School. He is director of the Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing. His books include Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond; Competition Demystified: A Radically Simplified Approach to Business Strategy Portfolio; Towards a New Paradigm in Monetary Economics (with Joseph E. Stiglitz); and Globalization: n. The Irrational Fear that Someone in China Will Take Your Job (with Judd Kahn).
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher’s Web site, viewed September 10 2015)
Type
textIdentifier
oai:search.ugent.be:ebk01:3710000000473241https://doi.org/10.7312/stig17549
https://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9780231540629.jpg
URN:ISBN:9780231540629
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Distance Education and Community Learning Networks linked by a Library of CultureSantiago, Joseph A (DigitalCommons@URI, 2011-02-14)Humans are relational beings with their modeled behavior as practical examples of cultural routines that they hear, see, read, and assemble on their own from communal pieces of information to answer the needs of their everyday lives (Bandura, & Jeffrey, 1973). Yet few researchers have looked at the differing synthesis of culture and generally assume that others share similar ideas/values that lead to particular events and worldviews (Lillard, p.5 1998). Informational and cultural contact zones can be created to support CLNs, universities, and individuals in a variety of roles to encourage their interactions so they might design, and challenge the fundamentals of these programs and seek to better cooperation amongst the public itself (Tremmel, 2000). By increasing communication and collaboration of educational systems throughout the community will begin to raise the standard of living for all people (Bohn, & Schmidt, 2008). This will begin to draw people out from the digital divide and increase the access of technology and information available to all people with the community. Utilizing CLNs to support and further education will allow an interconnected web of assessments, standards, and cooperative efforts that has the potential of increasing democracy by empowering people from their communities.
-
Teaching Mathematics Effectively to Primary Students in Developing CountriesCachaper, Cecile; Soendergaard, Bettina Dahl (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2017-09-06)This paper uses research from
 neuroscience and the psychology of mathematics to arrive at
 useful recommendations for teaching mathematics at primary
 level to poor students in developing countries. The
 enrollment rates of the poorer students have improved
 tremendously in the last decade. And the global Net
 Enrollment Ratio (NER) has improved since 2001 from 83.2
 percent to 90-95 percent except in Sub-Saharan Africa and
 South Asia. Making teaching of math and other subjects
 efficient for the poor in developing countries is a great
 challenge, particularly in south Asia and Sub-Saharan
 Africa. Many developing countries have explored new means of
 teaching math and other subjects. Mongolia changed its
 mathematics education, aiming to build a new set of
 priorities and practices, given the abandonment of earlier
 traditions. Similar to international trends of the time,
 South Africa in the 1990s extensively applied the
 constructivist learning philosophy which relied on
 exploration and discovery, with little emphasis on
 memorization, drill, In conformity with a belief that
 teachers could develop their own learning programs, there
 was virtual absence of a national or provincial syllabus or
 textbooks. Students were expected to develop their own
 methods for arithmetic operations, but most found it
 impossible to progress on their own from counting to actual
 calculating. This study integrates pertinent research from
 neuroscience and the psychology of mathematics to arrive at
 recommendations for curricular and efficient means of
 mathematics instruction particularly for developing
 countries and poor students at primary level. Specifically,
 the latest research in neuroscience, cognitive science, and
 discussions of national benchmarks for primary school
 mathematics learning, form the basis of our recommendations.
 These recommendations have a reasonable chance of working in
 the situational contexts of developing countries, with their
 traditions and resources.
-
Expanding Access to Early Childhood Development : Using Interactive Audio InstructionEducation Development Center; World Bank Group (World Bank Group, Washington, DC, 2015-03-19)The returns to investments in early childhood development (ECD) are manifold and can include improved school readiness, reduced drop-out rates, higher labor force productivity and greater social cohesion. Despite these high returns, enrollment in early childhood education is just 18 percent across Africa, with disproportionately high enrollment from children in urban areas and from wealthier families. Interactive Audio Instruction (IAI) is a distance learning technology that can deliver low-cost, culturally appropriate education via radio or mobile audio technology. It is a highly effective tool to reach children who can be hard to reach through conventional programs, including the rural poor and children with disabilities. IAI can also be an effective form of service delivery in unstable and conflict-affected regions.