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Hits 61 – 80 of 96

61
Cochlear implants in the deaf community: Current circumstances of cochlear implant users among the deaf youth in Sweden’s educational system
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62
スウェーデンにおけるバイリンガル聾教育の展開と変成:聾学校,難聴学校の教師へのインタビューから
鳥越,隆士. - 2009
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63
Standardization of Swedish Place-Names Yesterday and Today ; Session Paper
Nilsson, Leif. - : York University, 2009
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64
Female Names and Male Names. Equality between the Sexes ; Session Paper
Brylla, Eva. - : York University, 2009
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65
"Landskrona", "Sibirien" and "Jeriko": Borrowed Place Names in Sweden down the Ages ; Session Paper
Wahlberg, Mats. - : York University, 2009
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66
Composition Programs and Practices in Sweden: Possibilities for Cross-Fertilization with the United States
In: Dissertations (2008)
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67
Epidemics on networks and early stage vaccination
In: http://www2.math.su.se/matstat/reports/seriea/2007/rep12/report.pdf (2007)
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68
Translating EU civil protection in the Nordic states – towards a theoretical understanding of the creation of European crisis management capacities.
Britz, Malena.. - 2007
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69
The relation between fluid intelligence and the general factor as a function of cultural background: A test of Cattell's investment theory
Kvist, Ann Valentin; Gustafsson, Jan-Eric. - : Uppsala: Institute for Labour Market Policy Evaluation (IFAU), 2007
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70
Swedish language policy today with a view to other Nordic countries
In: Kalbos kultūra. - Vilnius ; Frankfurt, Main : CEEOL 79 (2006), 96-101
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71
Evaluating a Swedish Airborne Combat Capability using Computer Supported Morphological Analysis
In: DTIC (2005)
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72
Language policy and planning in Hungary, Finland & Sweden: Some common issues
Kaplan, Robert B.; Baldauf Jr., Richard B.. - : Multilingual Matters, 2005
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73
Language planning and policy in Europe: Vol I: Hungary, Finland and Sweden
Robert B. Kaplan; Richard B. Baldauf Jr.. - : Multilingual Matters, 2005
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74
Beloved pain: Male melancholia at the fin-de-siecle.
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75
Mobile Language Study
In: DTIC (2003)
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76
How Foreign are 'Foreign' Speech Sounds? Implications for Speech Recognition and Speech Synthesis
In: DTIC (2000)
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77
On the Determinants of Labour Market Institutions: Rent-Sharing vs. Social Insurance
Agell, Jonas. - : Munich: Center for Economic Studies and ifo Institute (CESifo), 2000
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78
On the Determinants of Labour Market Institutions: Rent-sharing vs. Social Insurance
Agell, Jonas. - : Uppsala: Uppsala University, Department of Economics, 2000
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79
Accounting for Culture, Language and Identity in Educational Discourses: The Case of Indigenous Sami in Finland, Sweden and Norway ...
Hellsten, Meeri Anneli. - : Griffith University, 1999
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80
Accounting for Culture, Language and Identity in Educational Discourses: The Case of Indigenous Sami in Finland, Sweden and Norway
Hellsten, Meeri Anneli. - : Griffith University, 1999
Abstract: This research project examines the enactment of various versions of the concept of ‘culture’ in education policy and practice. Its interest lies in how indigenous Sami culture is manifest in three different national, linguistic and education administration sites: Finland, Sweden and Norway. The constitution of ‘culture’ in these contexts is contingent upon its relativity to definitions of ‘culture’ defined by the national majority in power. The study adopts a definition of ‘culture’ as an accomplished rather than theoretically or socially predetermined phenomenon. Therefore, the study draws from the theory and application of Ethnomethodology (eg., Garfinkel, 1967; Heritage, 1984; Sacks, 1996a; 1996b). Contemporary theorisations about culture in education have been considered with regards to describing educational policy and practice around the world. Theorisations reflecting on the relationship between culture, power, language and education (e.g. Bourdieu, 1992; Foucault, 1980; Bernstein, 1996) have yielded bases on which to contrast and establish the current investigation of culture as an interactionally enacted phenomenon. This study consist of interview data, collected in 1993, during a lengthy field research visit to Sami country in northern Scandinavia. A total of 83 individuals from a total of 37 educational institutions in Finland, Sweden and Norway participated in the study. The participants came from different educational professional categories such as: Sami teachers; administrators at school, municipal, regional and national levels, teacher education, and other Sami academic institutions (such as adult and vocational education). The interviews consisted of approximately 15 semi-structured questions concerning knowledge and beliefs about the education policy and practice in use at the time. The interview also explored participants’ views on Saminess in the nation-state and descriptions of the role of culture afforded the indigenous group within the national domain. Further questions inquired about the implications of such descriptions, perceptions and cultural interpretations of the implementation of the Sámi school curriculum. The interviews were conducted in three languages (Finnish, Swedish and Norwegian) of which the researcher made use of two, namely, Finnish and Swedish. In Norway, the participants responded to questions in Norwegian, which is mutually intelligible with Swedish. Some culture-specific Sami vocabulary was also used. All data for the research analysis were translated into English by the researcher and verified as true translations by independent bi- and/or multi-lingual associates. The interview tapes were transcribed using conventions adapted from Heritage (1984) and Hutchby & Wooffitt (1998). The analyses were based on the sub-field of Ethnomethodology called Membership Categorisation Analysis (MCA) formulated according to frameworks developed by Sacks (e.g., 1996a) and later by Hester & Eglin (1997). The analyses explored descriptions about the membership category ‘Sami’ and its attribute Saminess as constructed by the members of the Sami education system. The analyses found that both the category ‘Sami’ and its attribute ‘Saminess’ were situatedly produced to warrant distinctive cultural, social and educational interpretations for the indigenous groups in the three countries. In Finland, the category ‘Sami’ was described as lacking in strong identity but as capable of looking after their own rights. In Sweden the category ‘Sami’ is described in the publicly available feature of ‘naturalness’ and is contrasted with descriptions about the ‘non-Sami’ who in turn are described as generating ‘struggle’, ‘resistance’ and ‘racism’ against the ‘Sami’. In Norway, the category ‘Sami’ is afforded the description of ‘standing alone’ as a group in the nation. The attribute ‘Saminess’ is described differently in the three contrastive interview sites. In Finland and Sweden, ‘Saminess’ and ‘all things Sami’ are constructed as ‘hidden’ category attributes which are made publicly desirable. For example, the need for the indigenous group to publicly display their ethnicity (e.g., wearing the Sami costume) is expressed by interviewees. In Norway the attribute ‘Saminess’ is described as a device from which flow other local practices of Sami education. In all three interview sites language is generated as the main tool through which both the category ‘Sami’ and its categorial attributes are realised and implemented. The study concludes that, according to the situatedness of the different descriptions of indigenous culture, identity and language, a uniform description of these phenomena cannot be applied. That is, one singular definition of ‘culture’ or ‘cultural hegemony’, for example, does not apply to all Sami situations across the Sami geographic area. In each situatedly diverging discursive occasion, members drew on different theorisations to account for the notion of ‘culture’. Such different constructions in turn have vastly different implications for the ways in which the educational package is consequently interpreted, developed and implemented. The concluding statement of this study is thus, that the world-wide agenda on cultural pluralism for the worlds’ classrooms benefits from a view of culture as a situatedly generated product, rather than a pre-theorised model of social order. ; Thesis (PhD Doctorate) ; Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) ; School of Cognition, Language and Special Education ; Faculty of Education ; Full Text
Keyword: culture; culture in education; education policy; Finland; identity; indigenous; language; Norway; Sami; Scandinavia; Scandinavian; Sweden
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/366397
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