Knowledge Society Research Papers - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Cosa è la conoscenza pubblica? Chi e in che modo la produce? Come ha a che fare con la democrazia? Attraverso la riflessione sociologica gli autori provano a rispondere a questi interrogativi mettendo in discussione la neutralità della... more
Cosa è la conoscenza pubblica? Chi e in che modo la produce? Come ha a che fare con la democrazia? Attraverso la riflessione sociologica gli autori provano a rispondere a questi interrogativi mettendo in discussione la neutralità della descrizione dei fenomeni sociali con cui le istituzioni sono chiamate a interagire. I contenuti dei diversi capitoli alimentano un dialogo tra le dinamiche di trasformazione della conoscenza pubblica e le suggestioni emerse nel corso di un’esperienza locale di programmazione nell’ambito delle politiche giovanili. Dai laboratori nelle scuole al mapping collaborativo, il lavoro sul campo è stato svolto nella prospettiva di favorire un apprendimento istituzionale, ibridando i significati attribuiti alla realtà dalle istituzioni pubbliche e quei saperi non codificati che le persone maturano nel corso della propria esperienza di vita. Molti quesiti restano aperti, ma dalla loro formulazione si intravedono le tracce per favorire una redistribuzione di poteri decisionali tra gli attori locali. Barbara Giullari svolge attività di ricerca sulle trasformazioni del lavoro e dei sistemi di welfare al Dipartimento di Sociologia e Diritto dell’Economia dell’Università di Bologna dove insegna Programmazione dei servizi sociali sul territorio. Gianluca De Angelis è ricercatore sociale, assegnista di ricerca all’Università di Bologna e collabora con istituti di ricerca nazionali e internazionali sui temi delle disuguaglianze, del lavoro e della sua organizzazione.
Creativity and innovation are main sources of development leading to both: wealth generation and job creation. While creativity produces knowledge, innovation makes practical utilization of it to provide value. This paper questions the... more
Creativity and innovation are main sources of development leading to both: wealth generation and job creation. While creativity produces knowledge, innovation makes practical utilization of it to provide value. This paper questions the contribution of higher education (HE) research to creativity and to innovation. It provides a background that identifies the various issues concerned; and it emphasizes the different types of research versus HE research considerations. It recognises the low share of HE in funding and in performing research; and it also stresses the opportunities enjoyed by HE to do better in both: creativity and innovation. It addresses various potential considerations including: HE-government and HE-business cooperation platforms; in addition to new research degrees and other potential arrangements. In this respect, it highlights experience from Saudi Arabia. The paper hopes to activate worldwide sharing of ideas on the future role of HE research in world development.
Planetar denken heißt, die Erde als Planeten ernst nehmen: vom Erdkern bis in den interplanetaren Raum, von der Nanosekunde bis zur Tiefenzeit, vom Elementarteilchen bis zur Erdmasse. Stehen Wechselwirkungen zwischen unserem... more
Planetar denken heißt, die Erde als Planeten ernst nehmen: vom Erdkern bis in den interplanetaren Raum, von der Nanosekunde bis zur Tiefenzeit, vom Elementarteilchen bis zur Erdmasse. Stehen Wechselwirkungen zwischen unserem Heimatplaneten und uns im Zentrum, nimmt ein planetares Wissensparadigma Gestalt an. Es geht einher mit der Relationierung menschlicher Existenz im Universum und der Relativierung der anthropozentrischen Sichtweise. So rücken Fragen der Bewohnbarkeit und Gastfreundschaft in den Vordergrund-und die Schaffung neuen Wissens bedeutet stets auch die Schaffung neuer Welten. Dieses Buch spricht alle mit dem Universum und dem Menschen befassten Wissenschaften an.
International migration is a historical phenomenon, which only recently has gained increasing importance, representing a focal point on the political agenda in most countries. One of the reasons is the deep transformation occurring in... more
International migration is a historical phenomenon, which only recently has gained increasing importance, representing a focal point on the political agenda in most countries. One of the reasons is the deep transformation occurring in last decades, both at global and local level, of the role played by its protagonists that are turning to be transnational agents. This is especially true for the skilled professionals, who migrate internationally. As a matter of fact, international human capital mobility is now regarded as “brain circulation” rather than “brain drain”: this new concept concerns individuals who maintain frequent and continued social, economic and political ties with their country of origin, exceeding thereby the territorial and cultural boundaries. In this scenario, China is one of the main sending countries of highly-skilled migrants, through which it can built economic and academic relations with other economic and technological advanced countries. Recently, Chinese policy makers have started to consider the brain drain phenomenon as an opportunity for the transmission of business and technological know-how, as well as tacit knowledge that is hard to find through official channels. This article intends to contribute to the scientific debate on the subject, highlighting the international relevance of the so-called Overseas Chinese Professionals (OCPs), investigating their spatial distribution and features. Besides, the paper will examine the emerging returning flow and the challenge that the country will have to cope with in the next future to impose itself as a innovative leading economy
Information technology (IT) is playing an increasingly important role in both business and individuals’ private lives. It is also consuming ever greater amounts of energy; therefore, it is a significant source of CO² emissions. Thus,... more
Information technology (IT) is playing an increasingly important role in both business and individuals’ private lives. It is also consuming ever greater amounts of energy; therefore, it is a significant source of CO² emissions. Thus, environmental and energy conservation issues have gained attention in recent years. The reality of rising energy costs and their impact on international affairs coupled with the increased concern over the global warming climate crisis and other environmental issues have shifted the social and economic consciousness of modern society. This paper discusses different aspects of green computing and its impact in India.
The anthropological transformation we are undergoing shows us the urgency of rethinking teaching and training, underlining the substantial inadequacy of our schools and universities in dealing with hypercomplexity, with the global... more
The anthropological transformation we are undergoing shows us the urgency of rethinking teaching and training, underlining the substantial inadequacy of our schools and universities in dealing with hypercomplexity, with the global extension of all political, social and cultural processes, and with their indeterminateness, interdependence and interconnection. The idea that educational processes are questions of a purely technical and/or technological nature, solely a problem of skills and know-how, is the "great mistake" of the hypertechnological society, based on the illusion of being able to measure, simplify and quantify everything, to eliminate error and unpredictability, to achieve total control and rationality. It is necessary to rethink education radically because the extraordinary scientific discoveries and the dynamics of the new technologies have completely overturned the complex interaction between biological and cultural evolution, doing away with the borders between the natural and the artificial, leading us not towards simplification, but in quite the opposite direction.
The aim of this work is to review a specific learning analytics method - sentiment analysis - in the field of Higher Education, showing how it is employed to monitor student satisfaction on different platforms, and to propose an... more
The aim of this work is to review a specific learning analytics method - sentiment analysis - in the field of Higher Education, showing how it is employed to monitor student satisfaction on different platforms, and to propose an architecture of Sentiment Analysis for Higher Education purposes, which trace and unify what emerges from the literature review. First, a literature review is carried out, which proves the widespread and increasing interest of the communities, of both scholars and practitioners, in the use of sentiment analysis in the field of Higher Education. The analysis, focused on three different e-learning domains, identifies weaknesses and gaps, and in particular the lack of a unifying approach which is able to deal with the different domains. Secondly, a prototype architecture – LADEL (Learning Analytics Dashboard for E-Learning) - is introduced, which is able to deal with the different e-learning domains. Some preliminary experiments are carried out, highlighting so...
abstract: In recent city planning, references to the concepts of the so-called creative class and the creative city are often to be found. How do those references affect the actual planning? My research on the cities of Dublin (Ireland)... more
abstract: In recent city planning, references to the concepts of the so-called creative class and the creative city are often to be found. How do those references affect the actual planning? My research on the cities of Dublin (Ireland) and Gothenburg (Sweden) shows that Richard Florida's concept of the creative class serves as a point of reference in both cases. Although the cities have specific ways of integrating the concept in their planning, they have one thing in common: the promotion of knowledge-intensive economies. That comes along with a specific understanding of creativity: it is understood as innovation. Two examples show that knowledge-intensive economies are decidedly used to enhance and/or convert certain neighborhoods. In that sense, promoting the creative economy affects both urban space(s) and the perception of the inhabitants. Therefore, governing a city by use of specific ideas has an impact, not least on the built environment. The discussion of the so-called creative cities has by now reached the city planning institutions of most of the Western European cities. Often, especially in bigger cities, the concepts creative city and creative class serve as programmatic elements of city development strategies. But so far, in sociological research, one question remained mainly unanswered: What impacts do these strategies have on the (built) environment? Meaning, what expressions does the focus on the creative class find, what places and spaces emerge and disappear in the course of this transformation? And obviously: What kind of places emerge through the work done by and for the creative class – and who are the actors? My paper presents modes of governance and the impacts that such development strategies have on cities. Empirical research in the cities of Dublin (Ireland) and Gothenburg (Sweden) shows: In both cases, it is explicitly referred to Richard Florida's concept of the creative class and his analyses on the relationship between cities and this class. Additionally, an orientation as creative city is present, but with different emphases. I will only briefly summarize Florida's main ideas before turning towards my case
Der Beitrag entwickelt folgende zentrale These: Um 1900 'begann unsere Gegenwart‘ insofern, als in den Städten der Übergang in eine moderne Mediengesellschaft erfolgte. Deren kompetenteste Nutzer waren Kinder und Jugendliche. Bemühungen,... more
Der Beitrag entwickelt folgende zentrale These: Um 1900 'begann unsere Gegenwart‘ insofern, als in den Städten der Übergang in eine moderne Mediengesellschaft erfolgte.
Deren kompetenteste Nutzer waren Kinder und Jugendliche.
Bemühungen, die Heranwachsenden vor ‚Schmutz und Schund‘ zu bewahren, thematisierten zentral, dass die neue Medienumwelt Heranwachsenden den unkontrollierten Zugang zu Wissensbeständen eröffnete, die als „erziehungswidrig“ galten. Diese Konstellation besteht
in Grundzügen bis heute, und viele aktuelle Reaktionsmuster gehen auf den Schundkampf der Kaiserzeit zurück. Die Kulturanthropologin Margaret Mead hat ein Modell entwickelt, das den Konflikt um die Regulierung des Wissenszugangs in den historischen Wandel der Generationenbeziehungen einzuordnen ermöglicht.
The post-industrial societies are going through the phenomenon of growing need and dependence on knowledge, distinctively, scientific knowledge. Knowledge is getting more and more associated with technology and being fed into the economy.... more
The post-industrial societies are going through the phenomenon of growing need and dependence on knowledge, distinctively, scientific knowledge. Knowledge is getting more and more associated with technology and being fed into the economy. The advanced nations are geared up to generate and disseminate the latest variety of knowledge. The workers in the economy are expected to develop high skills and update their knowledge base regularly. This has given these societies the name ‘Knowledge Society’ for their dependence on and extensive use of knowledge.
The educational sphere of the KS is changing its configuration and coming more and more under the vortex of economic need. The education policy of its members is also being guided by the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), chiefly an economic organisation. (OECD,2007)
However, it is surprising when a developing and agrarian nation like India takes up the same challenge under the guidance of the National Knowledge Commission which wants to transform India into a KS. It wants changes in its educational policy which fits in with the KS concept though the circumstances which led to the development of KS in the West are not present in India. This essay focuses on the question whether India will be able to become a KS just by changing the education policy or is it looking towards a new model of KS altogether. In doing so it presents the UNESCO point of view which claims every society has the potential to become a KS. Finally, the essay looks at the ‘KS’ as a perception as well as a phenomenon and attempts to contextualize India in the KS argument.
A taxonomy of literature reviews in education and psychology is presented. The taxonomy categorizes reviews according to: (a) focus; (b) goal; (c) perspective; (d) coverage; (e) organization; and (f) audience. The seven winners of the... more
A taxonomy of literature reviews in education and psychology is presented. The taxonomy categorizes reviews according to: (a) focus; (b) goal; (c) perspective; (d) coverage; (e) organization; and (f) audience. The seven winners of the American Educational Research Association's Research Review Award are used to illustrate the taxonomy's categories. Data on the reliability of taxonomy codings when applied by readers is presented. Results of a survey of review authors provides baseline data on how frequently different types of reviews appear in the education and psychology literature. How the taxonomy might help in judging the quality of literature reviews is discussed, along with more general standards for evaluating reviews. Literature reviews are playing an increasingly important role in social scientists' definition of knowledge. Cooper (1986) has shown that the use of the term "literature review" to describe documents in the Educational Resources Information Center and the Psychological Abstracts has shown a marked expansion in the 1980s. The probable cause for the growing prominence of reviews in the education and psychology literature is the increased numbers of per
The integration of modern Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) within the cultural domain creates what is commonly known as e-culture. The need to create an e-culture environment arose from the undeniable fact that the... more
The integration of modern Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) within the cultural domain creates what is commonly known as e-culture. The need to create an e-culture environment arose from the undeniable fact that the cultural heritage of a nation defines it and therefore, should be disseminated to all, regardless of their location and their disability. This article discusses an e-culture
Many studies show that unsafe behavior is the main cause of construction accidents. Safety education and training are effective means to minimise people's unsafe behaviors. Apart from traditional face-to-face construction knowledge... more
Many studies show that unsafe behavior is the main cause of construction accidents. Safety education and training are effective means to minimise people's unsafe behaviors. Apart from traditional face-to-face construction knowledge sharing, social media is a good tool because it is convenient, efficient, and widely used. We applied both social network analysis and sentiment analysis to investigate knowledge sharing on Twitter. Our study is a novel attempt to understand social structure of "construction safety"-related twitter networks and the opinion leaders. We selected and analyzed 6561 tweets of three users' networks on Twitter-"construction safety", "construction health" and "construction accident". We found that three networks had low density and many isolated vertices, which showed that users did not actively interact with each other. The opinion leaders in this study were mostly organizations or government agencies. The top one is "cif_ireland", the Irish construction industry's representative body, the Construction Industry Federation. 3200 Tweets of the top opinion leader were analyzed through graph metrics calculation, cluster analysis, sentiment analysis, and correlation analysis. The opinion leader used Twitter as a medium to disseminate the latest safety news. Thus, we may use Twitter to stimulate people's interest on construction safety topics, share construction safety knowledge, opinions and ideas. Besides, our results showed that sentiment valence had no correlation with number of favorites or retweets. Nevertheless, there was a positive correlation between favorites and retweets.
Este marco referencial forma parte de un proyecto doctoral actualmente en curso en la línea de investigación sobre redes de conocimiento y aprendizaje, específicamente en el área de sistemas de gestión del conocimiento y contenidos.... more
Este marco referencial forma parte de un proyecto doctoral actualmente en curso en la línea de investigación sobre redes de conocimiento y aprendizaje, específicamente en el área de sistemas de gestión del conocimiento y contenidos. Una red de colaboración está conformada por un grupo de centros o instituciones con un objetivo común. Por otra parte, una red académica, interconecta actores sociales dentro del proceso enseñanza-aprendizaje en actividades de investigación, gestión y enseñanza. Las actividades clave para la construcción en redes como medio para fomentar el espíritu emprendedor académico, son la movilidad y la colaboración. Este proyecto tiene como objetivo implementar una red virtual entre docentes miembros de Cuerpos Académicos en la Universidad Veracruzana en diversas disciplinas, para propiciar el trabajo colaborativo. Primeramente se examinan los logros que se han alcanzado con el establecimiento de redes académicas a nivel nacional y en la Universidad Veracruzana para identificar las necesidades de colaboración entre pares dentro del contexto de los Cuerpos Académicos. En este reporte de avances, se presenta la metodología que guiará el proyecto, de corte mixto, en una primera fase cuantitativa y en una segunda cualitativa. Los instrumentos que se aplicarán son un cuestionario diagnóstico para docentes universitarios, el cual tiene como objetivo evaluar sus competencias para la colaboración, comunicación y uso de nuevas tecnologías; otro será una entrevista a grupos focales, por medio de una guía de preguntas temática, donde se abordarán aspectos como trabajo en equipo, competencias para la comunicación y redes virtuales de colaboración, enfocados a la investigación y docencia multidisciplinaria de los Cuerpos Académicos. El impacto de este proyecto se concentra en involucrar activamente a los docentes de la Universidad Veracruzana, región Xalapa, en trabajos de colaboración, planeación e intervención, con el n de mejorar el desempeño del profesorado y la innovación educativa, a través de la interacción entre pares, mediado por las tecnologías de información y comunicación.
Palabras clave: Redes académicas, sociedad del conocimiento, competencias digitales, tecnologías de la información y la comunicación, planeación.
The purpose of this article is to improve understanding of internationalization as a strategic response to the catalysts of globalization and the knowledge society. The paper will attempt to critically identify and interpret how the... more
The purpose of this article is to improve understanding of internationalization as a strategic response to the catalysts of globalization and the knowledge society. The paper will attempt to critically identify and interpret how the aforementioned elements are being recontextualized and translated into responsive internationalization policies and systemic institutional change. The article takes a critical analysis approach on current internationalization efforts and provides a conceptual framework for developing a performance indicator set through a combination of institutional change theory (North 1990) and the Delta cycle for internationalization (Rumbley 2010). Recommendations on future research areas are made at the conclusion of the article.
The Arab world stretches from the Indian Ocean in the East to the Atlantic Ocean in the West. Twenty Arab countries occupy the southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean and border the Red Sea. It is an area of historical... more
The Arab world stretches from the Indian Ocean in the
East to the Atlantic Ocean in the West. Twenty Arab
countries occupy the southern and eastern shores of the
Mediterranean and border the Red Sea.
It is an area of historical importance, as it is the birthplace
of the world’s three Abrahamic religions. For centuries, the
region was a hub of groundbreaking science. It is of
contemporary strategic importance owing to its location
and a wealth of subterranean natural resources, essentially
in the form of oil and natural gas – 32% of the world’s
known natural gas reserves are to be found in the region –
as well as phosphate: Morocco alone possesses more than
half of the world’s reserves.
The region encompasses remarkable cultural similarities as
well as highly distinct political and economic systems with a
heterogeneous social fabric. Its peoples share a commonality
of language, history and religion but their societies are at
variance in terms of natural wealth, governance, currency,
traditions and socio-economic systems.
The period since the UNESCO Science Report 2005
appeared has been one of mixed fortunes for Arab
countries. The region has witnessed continuing political
upheaval and military conflict in the Gaza Strip and the
West Bank, Iraq, Lebanon and Sudan. The oil-exporting
Arab states of Kuwait, the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have enjoyed a
short-lived downpour of revenue resulting from the hike
in international oil prices to a peak of more than US$ 140 a
barrel in July 2008. Conversely, oil-importing countries
such as Jordan, Tunisia and Morocco have faced fiscal
difficulties due to their mounting national energy bills, a
situation compounded by the associated rise in the cost of
imported food commodities.
The subsequent plummet in oil prices, which fell to about
US$ 40 by the end of 2008 before recovering slightly in
2009, has brought this exceptional situation to an end.
It has also highlighted the volatility of oil prices and the
need for Arab oil-exporting countries to diversify their
economies in future.
Notwithstanding these difficulties, the same period also
witnessed renewed interest on the part of many Arab
countries in reinvigorating science and technology (S&T)
and higher education, with the launch of a number of topdown
initiatives to support education and research. Some
of these will be highlighted in the present chapter. A
handful of countries have also approved plans to allocate
more resources to research and development (R&D),
among them Egypt, Tunisia and Qatar.
The current global economic recession may not affect
Arab states in the immediate term, as the banking sector
in the majority of Arab states is highly regulated and only
loosely linked to international money markets. However,
the economic fallout will ultimately be felt by all,
negatively affecting foreign direct investment flowing into
Arab countries and real estate markets. This will cause a
slowdown in economic growth and a rise in
unemployment in the region. Arab countries reliant on
exporting goods and services to the USA and European
Union (EU) and those that normally receive aid from these
quarters may suffer. Even before the economic recession
emerged in the last quarter of 2008, unemployment in the
Arab world was higher than in any other part of the world,
at around 12%. Young job-seekers constitute over 40% of
the region’s unemployed (UNESCWA, 2007).
Despite the international economic uncertainty, Arab
states will have no choice but to stimulate science,
technology and innovation (STI), together with the
education sector, if only to overcome some lingering
problems like food, water and energy insecurity. Arab
countries can also learn from the remarkable socioeconomic
progress of countries such as Brazil, China,
India, Malaysia and Mexico, due in part to S&T.
"Just as there are typical cities of the industrial society (such as Manchester in the 19th and early 20th century) and the service society (e.g. New York’s Manhattan of the late 20th century), so there exist or will exist in future... more
"Just as there are typical cities of the industrial society (such as Manchester in the 19th and early 20th century) and the service society (e.g. New York’s Manhattan of the late 20th century), so there exist or will exist in future typical cities of the knowledge society. Following Manuel Castells (1989), we will call such cities “informational cities” (Yigitcanlar, 2010). When Castells published his book on such cities in 1989, he could not have known how existing informational cities would look like (since the internet had not happened yet at the time), but the theoretical foundation for dealing scientifically with informational cities had been laid. Such a city includes a cognitive infrastructure which is based on the infrastructure of information and communication technology (ICT) and consists of a knowledge infrastructure with regard to scientific knowledge and the institutions thereof (Carillo, 2006), as well as a creative infrastructure with regard to “copyright-based industries” or a “creative economy” (Florida, 2005). Referred to Castells “space of flows” builds the main infrastructures in informational cities. This concerns both the ICT infrastructure and the cognitive infrastructure. Today, we have informational cities in front of our eyes: Singapore, Seoul and Dubai set themselves the explicit goal of creating such cities (and are very far along the way); London, New York, San Francisco (and environs) and Shanghai predominantly bank on high-tech industry and services and are modifying their regions into informational cities. Today– at the beginning of the 21st century–we can use Castells’ theory to analyze this development.
The aim of this article is to develop a theoretical framework that allows quantifying the degree of informativeness of a city. We work with a framework of six groups of indicators:
• Infrastructures (ICT infrastructure and cognitive infrastructure as groundwork for knowledge cities and creative
cities),
• Position in the world city hierarchy,
• Structure of the labor market (including analysis of job polarization),
• Mix of companies,
• Political willingness to establish an informational city,
• Weak location factors (e.g., leisure facilities, shopping malls).
In this article, we give a brief overview how the indicators of informational cities could be measured, using mainly the
example of Singapore."
Der Aufsatz untersucht, wie die Zeitgenossen die Angebote der mit neuen Medien und Verbreitungsformen verbundenen großstädtischen Massenkultur um 1900 wahrnahmen, wie sie sie einordneten und bewerteten. Die zentrale These lautet, dass... more
Der Aufsatz untersucht, wie die Zeitgenossen die Angebote der mit neuen Medien und Verbreitungsformen verbundenen großstädtischen Massenkultur um 1900 wahrnahmen, wie sie sie einordneten und bewerteten. Die zentrale These lautet, dass eine Veränderung in Deutschland großes Unbehagen erzeugte: Die mit dem Übergang in die Mediengesellschaft außerordentlich erhöhte Zugänglichkeit von Wissen, und zwar insbesondere die neuartige Sichtbarkeit von Wissen im öffentlichen Raum. Sie forderte die tradierte Ordnung der Generationen heraus, in der eine kontrollierte und regulierte Weitergabe ausgewählten Wissens an die nachwachsende Generation vorgesehen war. Nun sahen sich viele Erwachsene einer "Disziplinlosigkeit" der Wissenstransfers gegenüber, für die sie oft die mediale Populärkultur verantwortlich machten.
Should education have any use? The question seems hardly worth asking, let alone answering. Yet this apparently absurd topic constitutes the major issue that has dominated debates about higher education in Britain for the past two hundred... more
Should education have any use? The question seems hardly worth asking, let alone answering. Yet this apparently absurd topic constitutes the major issue that has dominated debates about higher education in Britain for the past two hundred years. What is perhaps most remarkable is that such a controversy should have managed to sustain itself into such extreme old age; that indeed it reasserts itself even now. It is true that not even Oscar Wilde dared to assert publicly, at least, that universities should be like art- that is, perfectly useless. But to suggest that universities should be useful, that they should teach practical forms of knowledge, has been for many to go too far.
- by Jackie Krafft and +1
- •
- Knowledge Society, Competitive advantage, Industry Dynamics
If you experience problems downloading a file, check if you have the proper application to view it first. Information about this may be contained in the File-Format links below. In case of further problems read the IDEAS help page. Note... more
If you experience problems downloading a file, check if you have the proper application to view it first. Information about this may be contained in the File-Format links below. In case of further problems read the IDEAS help page. Note that these files are not on the IDEAS site. ...
- by Jean-jacques Paul and +2
- •
- Open Access, Knowledge Society
In an effort to carve a distinct place for social facts without lapsing into a holistic ontology, John Greenwood has sought to define social phenomena solely in terms of the attitudes held by the actor(s) in question. I argue that his... more
In an effort to carve a distinct place for social facts without lapsing into a holistic ontology, John Greenwood has sought to define social phenomena solely in terms of the attitudes held by the actor(s) in question. I argue that his proposal allows for the possibility of a “lone collectivity” that is (1) unpalatable in its own right and (2) incompatible with the claim that sociology is autonomous from psychology. As such, I conclude that the relevant beliefs need to be held by more than one person.
Knowledge management is currently changing significantly. KM effectively uses the right information and communication technology (ICT) and social interaction. New ways that exist in the virtual world make it possible to support knowledge... more
Knowledge management is currently changing significantly. KM effectively uses the right information and communication technology (ICT) and social interaction. New ways that exist in the virtual world make it possible to support knowledge and the process of acquiring it because to create knowledge and the process of sharing knowledge in a virtual world environment takes into account the social aspects needed. With the use of web 2.0 technologies, the main communication media in Second Life in the form of text, voice, instant messaging (IM), email and blogs can be maximized. By conducting exploratory analysis on "second life" research that contributes to a general understanding of how technology can be used to support or activate KM in education. College Student and lecturer can participate in teaching and learning processes, while academic staff supports the University business processes. A result provides factors that effects increase and impairment on student score, framework of 4 Pillar Solution Model for Second Life Education is formed and evaluation knowledge sharing maturity using COBIT 4.1 Framework and Maturity Level Classification using CMMI Model.
Back cover text: Real Social Science presents a new, hands-on approach to social inquiry. The theoretical and methodological ideas behind the book, inspired by Aristotelian phronesis, represent an original perspective within the social... more
Back cover text: Real Social Science presents a new, hands-on approach to social inquiry. The theoretical and methodological ideas behind the book, inspired by Aristotelian phronesis, represent an original perspective within the social sciences, and this volume gives readers for the first time a set of studies exemplifying what applied phronesis looks like in practice. The reflexive analysis of values and power gives new meaning to the impact of research on policy and practice. Real Social Science is a major step forward in a novel and thriving field of research. This book will benefit scholars, researchers, and students who want to make a difference in practice, not just in the academy. Its message will make it essential reading for students and academics across the social sciences.
- by Bent Flyvbjerg and +1
- •
- Screenwriting, Critical Theory, Critical Theory, Critical Theory
This chapter explores the impact of globalization on education in Greece and examines samples of challenges emerging from this process. More specifically, it examines and discusses the influence of globalization on educational changes in... more
This chapter explores the impact of globalization on education in Greece and examines samples of challenges emerging from this process. More specifically, it examines and discusses the influence of globalization on educational changes in Greece with reference to recent associated phenomena such as international sports-cultural manifestations, unemployment and brain drain of scientists. The Europeanization of Greece is evident in the constant educational changes since its accession in the European Union (EU), especially after the 1997 educational reforms associated with the EU subsidies. Aspects of globalization are reflected in the increasing immigration of cheap labor and at the same time emigration of enterprises, unemployment of university graduates and further education restructuring attributed to the need for new skills in the "knowledge society" of a competitive European and world market (see Meselidis, 2008). 7.2 Public Education at a Crossroad The process of globalization through global economy of the international elits, capital flow, scientization of the western world, the expansion of transnational companies, mass education and the new way of life as advertised and almost imposed my the mass media has reached almost every inhabited area on this planet. Calls in many countries for global education standards have generated a series of cross-national efforts to measure achievement in several subjects at different levels (Meselidis, 2007). Although they claim sensitivity to the unique characteristics of
In the last several decades many of the world's most developed countries have shifted from an industrial economy to a knowledge economy, one based on the creation of knowledge, information, and innovation. Educational researchers have... more
In the last several decades many of the world's most developed countries have shifted from an industrial economy to a knowledge economy, one based on the creation of knowledge, information, and innovation. Educational researchers have paid very little scholarly attention to this economic shift, although it has substantial implications. After all, educational historians have repeatedly shown how today's schools were designed in the first half of the 20th century to meet the economic needs of the industrial economy; if that economy is a thing of the past, then many features of contemporary schools may become obsolete. In today's knowledge society, creativity always occurs in complex collaborative and organizational settings. Teams and organizations innovate using open-ended, improvisational group processes. I argue that education should be structured around disciplined improvisation, and I advocate the use of situated, collaborative knowledge-building activities. I argue that creative collaboration in classrooms aligns with the social nature of innovation in today's economy.
Table of contents INTRODUCTION MCDONALDIZATION AS THEORY OF GLOBALIZATION THE NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND THE ACADEMIC PRECARIAT DATA ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION EFFICIENCY: MORE PEOPLE IN LESS TIME AND IN A CHEAPER WAY CALCULABILITY: THE... more
Table of contents
INTRODUCTION
MCDONALDIZATION AS THEORY OF GLOBALIZATION
THE NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND THE ACADEMIC PRECARIAT
DATA ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
EFFICIENCY: MORE PEOPLE IN LESS TIME AND IN A CHEAPER WAY
CALCULABILITY: THE RACE TO THE TOP
PREDICTABILITY: TEST BENCHMARKING
CONTROL: WIRELESS EDUCATION
IRRATIONALITY: THE LOSS OF HIDDEN CURRICULUM, THE FETISHISM
OF THE CONNECTIVITY, THE RANKING EFFECT AND THE ABSENCE OF
SOCIAL OUTCOMES DATA
THE SLOW TURN
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
Günümüzde, toplumun gelişiminde ve dönüşümünde üniversitenin merkezi bir rolü bulunmaktadır. Modern anlamda üniversitenin Batı’da ortaya çıkışının ardından bilginin merkezi olan Kilise zamanla bu konumunu kendi içinden doğan üniversiteye... more
Günümüzde, toplumun gelişiminde ve dönüşümünde üniversitenin merkezi bir rolü bulunmaktadır. Modern anlamda üniversitenin Batı’da ortaya çıkışının ardından bilginin merkezi olan Kilise zamanla bu konumunu kendi içinden doğan üniversiteye bırakmıştır.
Üniversite, bilim, teknoloji, toplum etkileşimi içinde evrimleşerek bugünkü halini almıştır. Mevcut durumda üniversitenin eğitim ve araştırma olarak iki temel fonksiyonu bulunduğu ve varoluş amacının toplumsal fayda üretmek olduğu kabul görmektedir. Bilginin tüm boyutlarıyla liberalleştiği, bireyler ve kurumların üniversite bağlamı dışında da bilgi döngüsüne katılabildiği yeni bir çağ başlamıştır. Bu yeni toplumsal bağlam üniversite için yeni meydan okumalar içermekte ve üniversiteyi bir değişime zorlamaktadır.
Üniversitenin eğitim fonksiyonu bireysel, araştırma fonksiyonu sektörel dönüşümü sağlarken, toplumsal dönüşümü sağlamak için “sosyal etki”nin üçüncü ve bağımsız bir fonksiyon olarak kurgulanması gerektiği düşünülmektedir.
Makalede, bireyin toplumsallığın merkezine yerleştiği, bir anlamda yalnızlaştığı bilgi çağında yeni üniversitenin, “sosyal etki”yi yeniden yapılandırarak iç ve dış müşterileri için bir toplumsallaşma aracı haline gelebileceği fikrini kavramsal olarak ele alınmaktadır.
The author explores the genesis of basic concepts of the knowledge society theory - their origin, relationships, an original content and problems of dating. The explication of central constructs (fundamentals) of knowledge society... more
The author explores the genesis of basic concepts of the knowledge society theory - their origin, relationships, an original content and problems of dating. The explication of central constructs (fundamentals) of knowledge society theories that emerged in 1940s – 1960s is presented. It is shown that the knowledge society concept takes its origin earlier than theoretical developments in the field of information and post-industrial society.
This book addresses the relationship between religion and knowledge from a sociological perspective, taking both religion and knowledge as phenomena located within ever changing social contexts. It builds on historical foundations, but... more
This book addresses the relationship between religion and knowledge from a sociological perspective, taking both religion and knowledge as phenomena located within ever changing social contexts. It builds on historical foundations, but offers a distinctive focus on the changing status of religious phenomena at the turn of the twenty-first century. Including critical engagement with live debates about intelligent design and the ‘new atheism’, this collection of essays brings recent research on religious movements into conversation with debates about socialisation, reflexivity and the changing capacity of social institutions to shape human identities. Contributors examine religion as an institutional context for the production of knowledge, as a form of knowledge to be transmitted or conveyed and as a social field in which controversies about knowledge emerge.
This article examines five common misunderstandings about case-study research: (a) theoretical knowledge is more valuable than practical knowledge; (b) one cannot generalize from a single case, therefore, the single-case study cannot... more
This article examines five common misunderstandings about case-study research: (a) theoretical knowledge is more valuable than practical knowledge; (b) one cannot generalize from a single case, therefore, the single-case study cannot contribute to scientific development; (c) the case study is most useful for generating hypotheses, whereas other methods are more suitable for hypotheses testing and theory building; (d) the case study contains a bias toward verification; and (e) it is often difficult to summarize specific case studies. This article explains and corrects these misunderstandings one by one and concludes with the Kuhnian insight that a scientific discipline without a large number of thoroughly executed case studies is a discipline without systematic production of exemplars, and a discipline without exemplars is an ineffective one. Social science may be strengthened by the execution of a greater number of good case studies.
The progress of humanity, over time, was subject to technical discoveries. This puts humanity in the face of new challenges: the transition to information society / knowledge society. This time, however, the focus must fall primarily on... more
The progress of humanity, over time, was subject to technical discoveries. This puts humanity in the face of new challenges: the transition to information society / knowledge society. This time, however, the focus must fall primarily on quality rather than quantity. Leap which should make it in the third millennium will be one based on the strength of mind, spirit, and not brute force, physical. Terms of new paradigms and expectations of the moment can not be met by itself, the natural evolution of things, but requires focusing on increasing volumes of knowledge and on their uptake. A key role in enhancing knowledge is the educational system. From this perspective, the authors have proposed carrying out a quantitative analysis of the state of the Romanian education is in line with Europe. Another objective of this paper is to achieve a number of estimates relating multiple indicators characterizing education in Europe and beyond.
- by David S Jacobson and +2
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- Law, Innovation Policy, Knowledge Society, European Union
By the early nineties a Chilean network on computers and education for public schools had emerged. There were both high expectancies that technology could revolutionize education as well as divergent voices that doubted the real impact of... more
By the early nineties a Chilean network on computers and education for public schools had emerged. There were both high expectancies that technology could revolutionize education as well as divergent voices that doubted the real impact of technology on learning. This paper presents an evaluation of the Enlaces network, a national Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and education initiative designed as part of a series of programs to overcome inequity and quality issues of public education in Chile, by integrating teachers and learners into the knowledge society. Data gathered and the results obtained in four major areas of educational policies -infrastructure, digital literacy, conditions of learning, and the impact on school learning of major national and international testsare presented and fully analyzed. The strengths and weaknesses of Enlaces as a visible component of the educational system and educational reform are also discussed. Enlaces has provided basic infrastructure tools, connectivity, ICTs, and teacher training to a huge number of schools, but critical results are narrow in terms of classroom learning and no additional competencies have been observed. Data and results are limited by structural bottlenecks in the educational and social system. Finally, the lessons learned after more than 15 years of implementing technology in Chilean schools are presented and fully discussed.
Die Bedeutung der Freiheit für den modernen Menschen Erich Fromm setzt sich in dieser Monografie mit der Bedeutung der Freiheit für den modernen Menschen auseinander und zeigt, dass er diese Freiheit, verstanden als positive... more
Die Bedeutung der Freiheit für den modernen Menschen Erich Fromm setzt sich in dieser Monografie mit der Bedeutung der Freiheit für den modernen Menschen auseinander und zeigt, dass er diese Freiheit, verstanden als positive Verwirklichung des individuellen Selbst, noch nicht errungen hat. Ein Grundlagenwerk des berühmten Sozialphilosophen, in dem seine wichtigsten Positionen versammelt sind.
Theories of post-industrial society have since their earliest formulations had a questionable relation to actual processes of social change. This article explores why they nonetheless continue to hold influence. Drawing on Mannheim, it... more
Theories of post-industrial society have since their earliest formulations had a questionable relation to actual processes of social change. This article explores why they nonetheless continue to hold influence. Drawing on Mannheim, it argues that theories of post-industrial society were originally formulated as utopia – hopeful speculations about the future. When their core concepts are used to describe present conditions, however, they take on the role of ideology, in
Mannheim’s sense of this term. The ideology of post-industrial society represents a specific world view in relation to work, knowledge and education. It elevates and celebrates ‘knowledge work’ and renders invisible existing forms of industry and workers’ knowledge necessary for practical work. When the present is viewed through the lens of these theories, practical work is cast as the work of yesterday and the people who do it as yesterday’s people.
Phronetic organizational research is an approach to the study of management and organizations focusing on ethics and power. It is based on a contemporary interpretation of the Aristotelian concept phronesis, usually as ‘prudence’.... more
Phronetic organizational research is an approach to the study of management and organizations focusing on ethics and power. It is based on a contemporary interpretation of the Aristotelian concept phronesis, usually as ‘prudence’. Phronesis is the ability to think and act in relation to values, to deliberate about ‘things that are good or bad for humans’ in the words of Aristotle (1976:1140a24–b12). Phronetic organizational research effectively provides answers to the following four value-rational questions, for specific problematics in management and organization studies: 1. Where are we going with this specific management problematic? 2. Who gains and who loses, and by which mechanisms of power? 3. Is this development desirable? 4. What, if anything, should we do about it?