Lost in Transition

Redefining Students and Universities in the Contemporary Kyrgyz Republic

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Student & Student Life, Higher Education
Cover of the book Lost in Transition by Alan J. DeYoung, Information Age Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Alan J. DeYoung ISBN: 9781617352324
Publisher: Information Age Publishing Publication: March 1, 2011
Imprint: Information Age Publishing Language: English
Author: Alan J. DeYoung
ISBN: 9781617352324
Publisher: Information Age Publishing
Publication: March 1, 2011
Imprint: Information Age Publishing
Language: English
Being a “student” has been and remains a highly desirable status for young people and their families in Kyrgyzstan. “Giving their children education” (dat detyam obrazovaniye) meaning “higher education” has become an imperative for many parents, even in a time of serious economic and social decline. The numbers of universities and university enrollments have increased dramatically in fact quadrupled since Kyrgyz independence from the former USSR in 1991. All this is happening just as the overall system of secondary education has basically collapsed. School quality and outcomes of learning for most Kyrgyz youth have become increasingly marginal even as those who run universities widely proclaim quality improvements and desires/intentions to join international higher education space. The book thus seeks to explain the manifest versus the latent functions of higher education in Kyrgyzstan. Relying on explanations of lived experience, the research attempts to explain how the seeming contradiction of a declining resource and intellectual base of universities yet appeals to parents and students as the system continues to expand with easily compromised accountability measures. The study approaches these topics by seeking to define what it now means to be a university student in Kyrgyzstan, as well as what many state universities have turned into" in contrast in contrast to how they were remembered by those who attended and taught within them two decades ago. The work also considers a number of private and intergovernmental universities which are allowed to operate in Kyrgyzstan and award both state and international diplomas. I portray the different organizational and ideological pursuits of these universities as they contrast with those of the state universities. Lost in Transition is an empirical look at higher education reform in Kyrgyzstan, employing several methodological strategies. These include a student survey given to over 200 students at five different universities; surveys and interviews with senior instructors and administrators at these same institutions; and a twoyear case study of a student and faculty cultures and subcultures at one particular national university particular university faculty in one of the larger state universities. The case study utilized participant observation, ethnographic interviews, document analysis, and social media.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Being a “student” has been and remains a highly desirable status for young people and their families in Kyrgyzstan. “Giving their children education” (dat detyam obrazovaniye) meaning “higher education” has become an imperative for many parents, even in a time of serious economic and social decline. The numbers of universities and university enrollments have increased dramatically in fact quadrupled since Kyrgyz independence from the former USSR in 1991. All this is happening just as the overall system of secondary education has basically collapsed. School quality and outcomes of learning for most Kyrgyz youth have become increasingly marginal even as those who run universities widely proclaim quality improvements and desires/intentions to join international higher education space. The book thus seeks to explain the manifest versus the latent functions of higher education in Kyrgyzstan. Relying on explanations of lived experience, the research attempts to explain how the seeming contradiction of a declining resource and intellectual base of universities yet appeals to parents and students as the system continues to expand with easily compromised accountability measures. The study approaches these topics by seeking to define what it now means to be a university student in Kyrgyzstan, as well as what many state universities have turned into" in contrast in contrast to how they were remembered by those who attended and taught within them two decades ago. The work also considers a number of private and intergovernmental universities which are allowed to operate in Kyrgyzstan and award both state and international diplomas. I portray the different organizational and ideological pursuits of these universities as they contrast with those of the state universities. Lost in Transition is an empirical look at higher education reform in Kyrgyzstan, employing several methodological strategies. These include a student survey given to over 200 students at five different universities; surveys and interviews with senior instructors and administrators at these same institutions; and a twoyear case study of a student and faculty cultures and subcultures at one particular national university particular university faculty in one of the larger state universities. The case study utilized participant observation, ethnographic interviews, document analysis, and social media.

More books from Information Age Publishing

Cover of the book Next Generation Performance Management by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Teaching from the Thinking Heart by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book This Fist Called My Heart by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Biographical Ruptures and Their Repair by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Advances in HelpSeeking Research and Applications by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Emerging Thought and Research on Student, Teacher, and Administrator Stress and Coping by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Evaluating Second Language Courses by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Encyclopedia of Peace Education by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Best Practices of Online Education by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Social Justice Education, Globalization, and Teacher Education by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Innovative Theory and Empirical Research on Employee Turnover by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Learning the Left by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Extending Education through Technology by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book International Perspectives on Social Justice in Mathematics Education by Alan J. DeYoung
Cover of the book Children, Childhood, and Everyday Life by Alan J. DeYoung
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy