As the World Learns: Education as a Vital Global Marketplace Represents the Future

Explore the many ways students are taught around the world.

by Owen Edwards

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Global Education: As the World Learns

Uganda

Credit: Getty Images
Global Education: As the World Learns

Sweden

Credit: Getty Images
Global Education: As the World Learns

Japan

Credit: Getty Images
Global Education: As the World Learns

Nepal

Credit: Getty Images
Global Education: As the World Learns

Chile

Credit: Loic Comolli

Much is made of the idea of the global marketplace, and few of us are unaffected by it. But the expansion of trade between the world's nations, for all its far-reaching effects, is a phenomenon involving commodities, products, and money. In other words, stuff, and the prices paid for it.

Another vitally important global marketplace exists, however, in which ideas rather than things are what count: the great international bazaar of education, a flourishing and bustling agora occupied by thousands of notions, traditions, theories, and practices devoted to the universal need to teach successive generations of the human race. Education is not oil, or electricity, or soy beans, or gold, but it represents something more important than any of those: the future.

For our second annual window on the world of education, we have gone looking for examples of how students are taught in places as different as Austria and Uganda, Chile and Pakistan. In some cases, our writers have found ideas that offer innovations to American educators; in other stories, they show us unique situations that may not hold out practical solutions to teachers in Cheyenne or Chicago, but still serve to broaden and deepen our knowledge of what works best a world away from our schools. Always, we are reminded that in the end all humans are connected through the global, and noble, act of passing along knowledge.

Join us on a world tour:

This article was also published in the February 2008 issue of Edutopia magazine.


Where Have I Been?

Submitted by Marianne Camp (not verified) on January 27, 2008 - 13:56.

I've been teaching children for over 34 years... and I just found you. This is my first visit to Edutopia and I am sooo impressed. Thank You. Thank You.
Marianne

The Global Education Collaborative

Submitted by Lucy Gray (not verified) on January 24, 2008 - 19:31.

Wow, this article is a tremendous resource! I am looking forward to exploring all the links offered here.

About a year ago, I started a ning social networking site for educators and students interested in working on global projects. We'd love to expand our network, so I hope others will take a look at the Global Education Collaborative. We're particularly interested in attracting more teachers from Africa and South America.

Some current projects include one on whaling sponsored by a school on Martha's Vineyard, another on food around the world, and another involving language exchange partners. We also have uploaded pictures, videos and links to resources that may be of interest to Edutopia readers.

Thanks again for another great issues of Edutopia!

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