Drexel University - Comprehensive, integrated academics enhanced by co-operative education, technology, and research opportunities. | Drexel University
Drexel University
Search events. View events.

All Categories

Click for help in using calendar displays. Print the contents of the current screen.
Display Format: 
Event Details
Notify me if this event changes.Add this event to my personal calendar.
Go Back
Decolonial Theories in Comparative Education
Start Date: 11/17/2020Start Time: 12:00 PM
End Date: 11/17/2020End Time: 1:00 PM

Event Description
Regina Cortina, PhD
Teacher's College, Columbia University


In this presentation, Dr. Regina Cortina will offer reflections building on her recent publication that applies decolonial theory to the field of Comparative Education. She will also highlight new strategies for teaching and learning and will use practical examples to show how new knowledge can be generated from the perspective of the Global South. Her hope is to engage in a fruitful dialogue with all participants in the Colloquium.

Dr. Regina Cortina is Professor of Education in the Department of International and Transcultural Studies at Teachers College, Columbia University. Her Presidential Address, “’The Passion for What is Possible’ in Comparative and International Education,” was published in the Comparative Education Review in November 2019. Professor Cortina’s teaching and publications are advancing the field by focusing on Decolonial Theories in Comparative Education. Most recently, two of her articles were published in 2019 and 2020 in Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education. Professor Cortina’s book published in 2017, Indigenous Education Policy, Equity, and Intercultural Understanding in Latin America, is a comparative study of policies designed to increase the educational opportunities of Indigenous students, protect their rights to an education inclusive of their cultures and languages, and improve their education outcomes. Her earlier book, The Education of Indigenous Citizens in Latin America (2014), examines unprecedented changes in education across Latin America that resulted from the endorsement of Indigenous people’s rights through the development of bilingual intercultural education. Professor Cortina’s other areas of expertise are gender and education, the education and employment of teachers, public policy and education, and the schooling of Latinx students in the United States. Among her other major publications are Women and Teaching: Global Perspectives on the Feminization of a Profession (Palgrave, 2006), Immigrants and Schooling: Mexicans in New York (Center for Migration Studies, 2003), and Distant Alliances: Promoting Education for Girls and Women in Latin America (Routledge, 2000). She has a Ph.D. in Education, a master’s degree in International and Comparative Education, and a master’s degree in Political Science, all from Stanford University, and a bachelor’s degree from the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City. Professor Cortina was President of the Comparative and International Education Society (CIES) in 2018-2019.

Contact Information:
Name: Anthony Hopkins
Phone: 215-895-0900
Email: ajh357@drexel.edu
Location:
This event will be held exclusively online. Please register to receive log-in information.
Audience:
  • Everyone
  • Special Features:
  • Online Access

  • Display Month:

    Advanced Search (New Search)
    Date Range:
    Time Range:
    Category(s):
    Audience: 

    Special Features: 

    Keyword(s):
    Submit
    Select item(s) to Search
    Select item(s) to Search
    Select item(s) to Search
    Select item(s) to Search