Learning in Morocco : language politics and the abandoned educational dream
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Learning in Morocco : language politics and the abandoned educational dream
(Public cultures of the Middle East and North Africa / Paul A. Silverstein, Susan Slyomovics, and Ted Swedenburg, editors)
Indiana University Press, c2016
- : paperback
Available at / 3 libraries
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Kobe University General Library / Library for Intercultural Studies
: paperback372-434-B061201620411
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: paperbackMWMR||4||L11916885
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 249-268) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Learning in Morocco offers a rare look inside public education in the Middle East. While policymakers see a crisis in education based on demographics and financing, Moroccan high school students point to the effects of a highly politicized Arabization policy that has never been implemented coherently. In recent years, national policies to promote the use of Arabic have come into conflict with the demands of a neoliberal job market in which competence in French is still a prerequisite for advancement. Based on long-term research inside and outside classrooms, Charis Boutieri describes how students and teachers work within, or try to circumvent, the system, whose contradictory demands ultimately lead to disengagement and, on occasion, to students taking to the streets in protest.
Table of Contents
Writing about Language: Terminology and Transliteration
1. Schools in Crisis
Part I
2. Study Antigone to become a Scientist!
3. Paradox and Passion in the Tower of Babel
Part II
4. Inheritance, Heritage, and the Disinherited
5. Once Upon a Time, There Was a Happy Old Berber Couple
Part III
6. Desires in Languages
7. Out of Class, Into the Street
Notes
References
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"