Nepali teachers’ perceptions of and responses to the impacts of globalisation on their context.

Authors

Keywords:

Nepal, educational reform, teachers’ perceptions, contextual factors

Abstract

Since the country’s democratization in 1950, the Nepali education system has undergone 12 reform cycles. These reforms have been influenced by international policies emerging from the Millennium Development Goals and the subsequent Sustainable Development Goals. They have instigated an increasing shift toward Westernized pedagogical practices, particularly Learner-Centred Education. Within the substantial research on the Westernization of the Nepali education system and Learner-Centred Education, there is often a lack of the voice of teachers. The research often positions teachers as passive or resistant implementors of top-down reform rather than proactive, interpretative agents of change. A doctoral study reviewing Nepali primary school teachers’ implementation of the School Sector Reform Plan (2009 -2016) found a disjuncture between the teachers’ support for the philosophy of Learner-Centred Education inherent in the Plan and their implementation of these practices in their classroom. This paper conveys the voices of teachers as they describe the factors that they perceived influenced their philosophical support for change. Far from being passive or resistant implementors of policy reforms, their discussions highlight careful consideration of their context and the needs of their students.

Author Biographies

  • Miriam Ham, CQUniversity
    Miriam is a lecturer in the College of Education on the Cairns campus, CQUniversity. She is the Campus Coordinator for Education, Head of Course Diploma of Secondary School Teaching. She was awarded a Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Exemplary Practice in Learning and Teaching (Tier 1) for 2020.
  • Karena Menzie-Ballantyne, CQUniversity
    Karena is a lecturer in the College of Education at CQUniversity situated on the Bundaberg campus. In addition to her In addition to the doctoral research in Active Citizenship she has 14 years-experience designing and implementing courses and professional development in education for global citizenship/global competence in both tertiary and not-for-profit contexts including ACU, QUT, UQ, UTas and at the Global Learning Centre implementing the AusAID-funded Global Education Project.

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Published

2021-12-23

Issue

Section

General Refereed Papers