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Autor/inn/enAnlimachie, Moses Ackah; Avoada, Cynthia; Amoako-Mensah, Thomas
TitelLeapfrogging Inequality Strategies for Transformed Rural Education: A School District Case, Ghana
QuelleIn: Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 32 (2022) 1, S.33-51 (19 Seiten)
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Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Zeitschriftenaufsatz
ISSN1839-7387
SchlagwörterSchool Districts; Rural Areas; Educational Change; Foreign Countries; Participatory Research; Action Research; Culturally Relevant Education; Sustainability; Cultural Capital; Educational Strategies; Educational Improvement; Outcomes of Education; Rural Education; Foreign Policy; Instructional Design; High School Students; Rural Urban Differences; Cost Effectiveness; Information Technology; Technology Integration; Art Education; School Community Relationship; Teacher Education; Teacher Recruitment; Administrator Attitudes; Elementary Secondary Education; Equal Education; Access to Education; Ghana
AbstractThis case study of a Ghanaian rural school district uses a community-based participatory action research to engage with municipal officials, a rural community, and its local school participants to codesign culturally sustainable education strategies. The study triangulated community meeting discussion, interviews, field notes and document analysis to elicit grassroots policy approaches and community cultural capital driving rural education success. The study identified a strong correlation between community participation, educational improvement and reduction in inequality and poverty. The study found that policy interventions that remove financial and geographical barriers to education access, elicit community participation and improve rural livelihoods were effective strategies for improving education outcomes for Ghanaian rural communities. The study identified rich rural cultural capital facilitating education improvement which evident that the problem of rural education has more to do with marginalisation than being rural. The study argues that valuing rural spaces by thinking spatially and innovatively offers new possibilities to transform rural education. Therefore, rural education must be pursued as collective social good or socio-cultural process, entailing an endless interchange of shared aspirations, resources, and cultural capital for mutual survival. This approach must be ground-up, fuelled by community participation, decolonisation, culturally responsivity in designing and recovering contextually appropriate universal education and integrated development model for Ghana and Africa. (As Provided).
AnmerkungenSociety for the Provision of Education in Rural Australia. P.O. Box 659, Wembly, Western Australia 6913. Tel: +08-9285-0626; e-mail: admin@spera.asn.au; Web site: http://www.spera.asn.au/
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2024/1/01
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