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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Holland, Alison – History of Education, 2023
The question of 'native' education became urgent in interwar Britain in the context of imperial expansion in Africa. Simultaneously, debates concerning black education were central to a global pan-African nationalist movement demanding black rights and liberation. In this context, education became a site of competing ideas regarding black…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, War, Blacks
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Kaunda, Chammah J. – Religious Education, 2020
Nyambura Jane Njoroge is one of the most courageous, impeccable and emancipatory African theological voices who have engaged in the unceasing search for transforming theological education in Africa. This article takes an appreciative inquiry in engaging Njoroge as a lens to conceptualize what is seen as her main concern in ecumenical theological…
Descriptors: Christianity, Theological Education, Transformative Learning, Educational Philosophy
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Perry L. Glanzer – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
A recent global reconnaissance of Christian higher education found a number of key themes that shaped current developments, such as the pressing challenges of secularization and nationalization but also the advantages of privatization and massification. This article provides an update to this older analysis by taking a birds-eye view of trends…
Descriptors: Christianity, Trend Analysis, Educational Trends, Religious Education
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Yonah Hisbon Matemba – Religious Education, 2024
This paper initiates a novel discourse advocating for the anti-colonization of religious education (RE) in Africa South of the Sahara (ASoS). It illustrates how anti-colonial critiques can not only offer more precise theoretical perspectives but also generate a practical imperative for a paradigm shift in a school subject "still"…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Colonialism, Power Structure, African Culture
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Matemba, Yonah – British Journal of Religious Education, 2021
Through the lens of an anticolonial (as opposed to postcolonial) analytical framework, this conceptual paper examines decolonising efforts (and failures) in Religious Education (RE) as a school subject in post-independent sub-Saharan Africa. It critiques the missionary/European epistemological hegemony that continues to render RE a colonial rather…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Criticism, Epistemology, Foreign Policy
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Peter Kallaway – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
During the 1930s there was a significant shift in the debate about African colonial education. Above all, somewhat discreetly hidden behind the formal language of the educational documents, is the question of the challenge presented to the traditional literary/religious missionary curriculum, or even to the "adaptationist" debate about…
Descriptors: Educational History, Best Practices, Colonialism, Curriculum Development
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Mfum-Mensah, Obed – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2017
This paper employs postcolonial framework to discuss the contradictions of promoting western education in Islamic communities in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Prior to colonization, Islamic education was an important socializing process that instilled strong Islamic identity in Islamic communities in SSA. European encounters in SSA and the…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Islamic Culture, Islam, Foreign Policy
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Watras, Joseph – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2015
During the first years of the twentieth century, Christian missionaries tried to improve their efforts to bring the message of the Gospel to areas such as British Tropical Africa. The process stemmed from the World Missionary Conference in 1910 in Edinburgh, Scotland, where conference organisers used the then popular method of social surveys to…
Descriptors: Surveys, Educational Change, Educational History, Foreign Policy
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Edwin, Shirin – Gender and Education, 2011
This article examines the representation of female education in Qur'anic schools in a selection of West African francophone novels. I argue that in being the earliest form of education for most Muslim women and also a neglected topic of scholarly interest, the Qur'anic school shapes their feminisms in more significant ways than has been…
Descriptors: Feminism, Muslims, Islamic Culture, Islam
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Ustorf, Werner – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2011
The history of the North German Mission Society (established 1836 in Hamburg) and its activity on the West African coast (from 1847 onwards among the Ewe, in what is now Ghana and Togo where it was and still is known as the "Bremen Mission") mirrors neatly the various phases of the idea of "mission": its composite motivation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intervention, War, Religion
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Diallo, Ibrahima – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2012
Traditional African literacy practices have often been ignored in the wake of European colonialism and the educational policies of colonial governments. Nonetheless, literacy had been established in parts of Africa following the introduction of Islam. This paper will examine the developments of literacy in pre-colonial West Africa. In this region,…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, African Languages, Language Planning, Islam
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Karram, Grace – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2011
Over the past decade, the largest growth in Sub-Saharan Africa's private higher education has been among institutions with religious affiliations. This article examines the rise of private, religious higher education in Sub-Saharan Africa with international affiliations. Using an analysis of multiple stakeholders from the region and international…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Ideology, Quality Control, Foreign Countries
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Assie-Lumumba, N'Dri T. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
In this article I analyze some of the cultural factors that have determined and influenced the teaching profession and its evolution in African countries. Firstly, I use an historical approach to review conceptual issues on teachers, teaching and learning; secondly, I examine salient features of the idea and practices of teachers and teaching in…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Social Status, Reputation, Global Approach
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Asamoah-Gyadu, J. Kwabena – Religious Education, 2010
This article examines some of the pertinent challenges arising out of personal experiences encountered through teaching religion and theology within an African environment. What the author describes as the "new Africa" in his title is a continent that has transitioned from slavery and colonialism into a global fraternity of democratic…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Governance, Slavery, Foreign Countries
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Anderson, Allan – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2004
This article examines the writing of Pentecostal history and in particular, the biases and presuppositions associated with it. The problem of sources and the neglect of the important role of indigenous ("native") workers in the historiography of Pentecostalism in Africa, Asia and Latin America is the main focus. It refutes the idea of an…
Descriptors: Historiography, Foreign Countries, Religious Cultural Groups, Role
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