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Australians have one of the highest levels of educational attainment in the world, but not every Australian has access to a world-class education. What represents a ‘good’ education in a country with an increasingly segmented school system and a tertiary sector that faces profound uncertainties, both financial and existential?
Griffith Review 75: Learning Curves explores the full spectrum of educational experiences - from preschool to postgrad, from private to public, and from sandstone to the school of life.
How has the global information age reshaped our knowledge institutions? What potential and possibilities lie in embracing Australia’s vast repositories of First Nations’ knowledge? Are traditional subjects - arts, humanities, social sciences - still relevant in an increasingly contested field? And what do those engaged in the different aspects of learning - students, teachers, policymakers - make of their experiences?
Learning Curves navigates a range of life-long learning pathways, and explores the necessity of rupture and transformation along the way.
Contributors include:
Gabbie Stroud - Tegan Bennett Daylight - Lisa Fuller - Bri Lee - Erin Hortle - Miriam Sved - Gwilym Croucher - Catherine Ball - Pasi Sahlberg - Cath Keenan - Winnie Dunn - Andrew Leigh
‘Where the news cycle tends to feed cynicism, Griffith Review is the necessary counterpoint: a place of ideas and possibility. It’s a relief to find the quality writing, reflection and observation nurtured in its pages.’ - Billy Griffiths, historian and writer
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Australians have one of the highest levels of educational attainment in the world, but not every Australian has access to a world-class education. What represents a ‘good’ education in a country with an increasingly segmented school system and a tertiary sector that faces profound uncertainties, both financial and existential?
Griffith Review 75: Learning Curves explores the full spectrum of educational experiences - from preschool to postgrad, from private to public, and from sandstone to the school of life.
How has the global information age reshaped our knowledge institutions? What potential and possibilities lie in embracing Australia’s vast repositories of First Nations’ knowledge? Are traditional subjects - arts, humanities, social sciences - still relevant in an increasingly contested field? And what do those engaged in the different aspects of learning - students, teachers, policymakers - make of their experiences?
Learning Curves navigates a range of life-long learning pathways, and explores the necessity of rupture and transformation along the way.
Contributors include:
Gabbie Stroud - Tegan Bennett Daylight - Lisa Fuller - Bri Lee - Erin Hortle - Miriam Sved - Gwilym Croucher - Catherine Ball - Pasi Sahlberg - Cath Keenan - Winnie Dunn - Andrew Leigh
‘Where the news cycle tends to feed cynicism, Griffith Review is the necessary counterpoint: a place of ideas and possibility. It’s a relief to find the quality writing, reflection and observation nurtured in its pages.’ - Billy Griffiths, historian and writer
Griffith Review is a quarterly literary journal. Every edition explores a different theme, bringing together long-form critical and analytical non-fiction and creative writing from the finest emerging and established writers from Australia and overseas.