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NON-WESTERN EDUCATIONAL TRADITIONS: INDIGENOUS APPROACHES TO EDUCATIONAL THOUGHT AND PRACTICE (3rd ed.)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2006
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NON-WESTERN EDUCATIONAL TRADITIONS: INDIGENOUS APPROACHES TO EDUCATIONAL THOUGHT AND PRACTICE (3rd ed.). Timothy Reagan. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 2005. Pp. xiii + 308. $36.00 paper.
Within the field of applied linguistics, globalization expresses itself most clearly in two phenomena: (a) the increase of cultural and linguistic diversity in urban centers around the world and (b) the rapid spread of English as a global language fueled by the perception of many policy-makers, educators, and parents that English proficiency is a prerequisite for social and economic advancement. Both of these phenomena have increased the level of cross-cultural contact within the educational system. Teachers in Western contexts are now teaching students who come from many different cultural and educational traditions. Similarly, as countries around the world compete to promote English proficiency, teachers and students in these countries are increasingly coming into contact with the cultural traditions and educational assumptions embodied in English language curricula and personified in teachers who come from English-speaking countries.
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