Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Food resilience and home economics in the digital age
    (Asian Regional Association for Home Economics, 2023)
    In an era marked by dynamic digital growth, environmental changes, population growth, and global economic fluctuations, the concept of food resilience has emerged as a critical pillar for sustaining communities and ensuring food security. Food resilience refers to a household’s ability to withstand stresses in disruption to food availability, such as natural calamities and man-made disruptions that affect food production and distribution. In the face of the recent Covid-19 pandemic, erratic weather conditions and wars, the importance of building and strengthening food resilience cannot be overstated. In this context, understanding and prioritizing food resilience is not merely a strategic choice but an imperative for the well-being and stability of societies worldwide. In addition, consumers should utilize the advancement of technology to increase their food resilience. Home Economists have an important role to play, using the three “Ts”—Teach, Tech, Touch —to “teach” the correct knowledge on food consumption, include the use of “technology” to make their lifestyles more sustainable and resilient to food disruption and to “touch” the community with our extension programs.
      48
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Children's lifeworlds in a global city: Singapore
    (Springer, 2023) ;
    Nanthini Karthikeyan
    ;
    ;
    Bartholomaeus, Clare
    ;
    Yelland, Nicola
    This book examines connections between policy contexts, school experiences and everyday activities of children growing up in the global city of Singapore. In particular, it explores how Singapore children’s everyday experiences inside and outside of school shape their orientations towards educational success. Alongside an analysis of school life and educational policies, it also considers children’s out-of-school activities, including leisure, homework, and enrichment activities, and connections between these and their school-based activities. The book draws on empirical data from Primary 4 classes in two Singapore schools in the form of student-completed surveys, classroom ethnographies, student responses to a learning dialogues activity, and a re-enactment of one child's out-of-school life, as well as curriculum and policy analysis. It provides readers with an in-depth understanding of Singapore Primary 4 children’s experiences inside and outside of school, including the structure of timetables and pedagogical approaches encountered in school lessons, children’s enjoyment of activities inside and outside of school, children’s engagement and wellbeing at school, and the impact of Singapore’s educational policies on children’s learning experiences. Moving beyond a simplistic focus on Singapore children’s academic performance in international high-stakes testing, the book offers a comprehensive exploration of their lives inside and outside of school. This holistic approach is unique in the Singapore context and contributes to a greater understanding of children’s everyday lives in the city.
      85
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Everyday learning looks like this: Classroom ethnographies in three global cities
    (Springer, 2023)
    Lee, I-Fang
    ;
    Leung, Vivienne Wai Man
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    ; ;
    Nanthini Karthikeyan
    ;
    Bartholomaeus, Clare
    ;
    Yelland, Nicola
    This chapter draws on the Global Childhoods ethnographic data from Year 4 classrooms in Hong Kong, Melbourne and Singapore to elucidate what everyday learning looks like in the three global cities. Acknowledging that learning assumes varied shapes and forms, our primary focus aims to explicate some key features of everyday classroom life in each city, with a focus on time and space. In doing so, we examine the class timetables and explore how time was organised in the schools, and consider the design of classrooms and playgrounds, including the ways in which these spaces were typically used by students and teachers to create learning opportunities. Our analyses are situated within the position of critical onto-epistemological perspective though which we offered critical insights to provoke new understandings about how educational practices are deeply situated within local sociocultural contexts with greater implications for broader learning outcomes and students’ educational success. We seek to provide discussions that are both critical and comparative for rethinking the ways in which opportunities, challenges and diversity in the three education systems became evident from the classroom ethnographies. We also consider the implications of structured learning for shaping children’s multiple ways of being, belonging and becoming learners.
      31
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Everyday out-of-school lifeworlds look like this: Children’s activities in three global cities
    (Springer, 2023)
    Bartholomaeus, Clare
    ;
    Chan, Anita Kit Wa
    ;
    Yelland, Nicola
    ;
    Nanthini Karthikeyan
    ;
    An exploration of children’s lifeworlds must necessarily go beyond school, to consider children’s everyday out-of-school lives. In this chapter, we focus on the out-of-school activities of Year 4 (9- and 10-year-old) children in the global cities of Melbourne, Hong Kong, and Singapore. We draw on survey responses from 627 children to consider their activities on weekdays after school and weekends, as well as their enjoyment of these activities. Leisure activities were most common across the cities, which are likely to be easily accessible to children, along with the academic activity of homework. To provide a closer reflection on children’s lifeworlds, we also explore the out-of-school activities of one child in each city, drawing on data (re)produced as a re-enactment of their Thursday afternoons, and a discussion of their regular activities across a week. We suggest similarities amongst the children’s activities may be partly attributed to shared features of their lives, such as their age and positioning as children, temporality, school attendance, and location in a global city, rather than constituting a universal global childhood. We also reflect on the need to consider diversity amongst children within cities to provide a more complex picture of children’s everyday out-of-school lifeworlds.
      24
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Taking the lead in STEM: A case study of a Singapore primary science teacher's attempt at STEM

    The implementation of STEM is fraught with challenges for teachers as they struggle in the transformation from being single disciplinary-based teachers to cross-disciplinary trailblazers. Since the 1960s, there have been reports on how teachers find it difficult to cope during times of curriculum reform. The reasons are varied, but the unwanted ‘side-effects’ include teachers being deskilled and feeling dejected about the education system, resulting in high turnover. With the inundation of narratives about the promises of STEM education and how teachers need to adapt and prepare students for the 4th industrial revolution, how do teachers digest the narratives and take on this new challenge? What impact does this new wave of education goals have on primary science teachers who are mostly not trained in the STEM disciplines? This paper reports on a case study of a primary school teacher in Singapore who participated in a larger study and made efforts to introduce integrated STEM to his students. We followed the journey of this teacher who led a team of teachers in his school to learn, then teach, an integrated STEM curriculum that entails coding with humanistic outcomes. The findings illuminated his positive thinking about STEM teaching, the STEM capital he had harnessed to enact the curriculum, and the ways he empowered himself to carry out the curriculum effectively. The findings could offer insights for the enablers of STEM curriculum making even as teacher agency is circumscribed by traditional disciplinary and personal structures.

      14