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Global Education Forum Events
Spring 2024 Events
Monday, April 1, 2024
5:30 p.m.-7:00 p.m. ET
3rd Annual Charles Tesconi Lecture
"Education in Authoritarian Times"
Featuring Dr. , professor and co-director, Center for International Education at George Mason University
Register for this virtual event .
Saturday, February 10, 2024
9:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
2024 Annual Student Research Conference of the Washington Consortium for Comparative and International Education
Where: 鶹Ƶ's Spring Valley Building
More details and proposal submission
Fall 2023 Events
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
7:00-8:00 p.m.
Alternative Pathways: Online Discussion with Recent ITEPers Abroad
Please join current and alumna of ITEP: Beck Waghorne, Maddy Crawford, and Julia Bouchelle who will share their experiences abroad and answer questions current ITEPers have about career paths and opportunities in the field.
Where: Online, advance registration required
Register
Spring 2023 Events
Spring 2023 Global Education Forum
"Learning to Teach Controversial Issues in Divided Societies" with Dr. Judith Pace
February 9, 2023
The 2nd Annual Charles Tesconi Lecture [A Virtual Event]
Dr. Judith Pace, a teacher education professor in the School of Education at the University of San Francisco, gave a virtual talk, "Learning to Teach Controversial Issues in Divided Societies."
Dr. Pace utilizes project-based learning, case studies, and elements of practice-based teaching in courses such as Learning and Teaching, Curriculum Currents and Controversies, Curriculum Development and Design, and Teaching Controversies.
She has studied classroom authority relationships and academic engagement, teaching for democratic citizenship in government classes, social studies under high-stakes accountability, and teacher preparation for teaching controversial issues (Source: USFCA). Read her full bio at the University of San Francisco .
***A video recording of this event is not available.
Other events:
- April 3, 2023: Book Launch and Talk for Dr.Elizabeth A. Worden’s New Book, Citizenship Education in a Divided Society: Lessons from Curricula and Practice in Northern Ireland
- April 21 and 22, 2023: Annual ITEP Gathering; In-Person Reception and Panel Discussion: Friday Evening (4/21) from 6-9pm; Online Sessions: Saturday (4/22) from 9am-12pm
Fall 2022 Events
Fall 2022 Global Education Forum
"Critical Approaches to Education Research: A Conversation on Engaging with Adolescent Girls in the U.S. and Zimbabwe"
November 14, 2022
[A Virtual Event]
Keynote Address by Sabrina J. Curtis, Ph.D., Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies professor at the George Washington University, and Ellen Chigwanda, Project Manager and Advocacy Advisor for CARE USA.
Moderator: Jisun Jeong, Ph.D.
The video recording of this discussion can be viewed here.
Advancing Education in Muslim Societies:
Implications for Policy, Pedagogy, Training, and Development
November 11-13, 2022
[Virtual and In-person at 鶹Ƶ]
Explore education systems and practices in Muslim societies and the Muslim diaspora with scholars across fields and disciplines who will share their research on education and its implications for global societies by attending this 6th annual symposium.
Keynote Address, "Universities in Muslim Societies: A Call For Resistance and Responsibility" by Nuraan Davids, Ph.D. / Watch .
Dr.Davids is Professor of Philosophy of Education in the Faculty of Education at Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa. Dr. Davids presented the keynote address: “Universities in Muslim Societies: A Call for Resistance and Responsibility.” In her address, she argues that “a university is at risk when it fails to see itself as a place of argumentation, resistance, and responsibility. For universities in Muslim societies, this risk is compounded when one considers the ethico-religious responsibilities placed on what it means to be educated.” Dr. Davids argues “for a preparedness to being reflectively open to new considerations and fusions of knowledge; a pedagogy of resistance and dissent that could enhance intellectualism; and a responsiveness to broader social malaises as a fulfillment of education as a human responsibility.”