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Asian Education Podcast

Podcast von Kyushu University UNESCO Chair on Education for Peace, Social Justice and Global Citizenship

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The Asian Education Podcast is a forum for discussing research on education and related social issues in Asian contexts. It also seeks to provide Asian perspectives on global debates over education policy and practice. It also seeks to provide Asian perspectives on global debates over education policy and practice. Hosted by Edward Vickers, Yoko Mochizuki, and Gairanlu Pamei, the Asian Education Podcast is produced by the UNESCO Chair on Education for Peace, Social Justice and Global Citizenship at Kyushu University, Japan, in association with the Comparative Education Society of Asia.

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Episode Series 6, Episode 4: The Politics of Post-Crsis Challenges in Education Cover

Series 6, Episode 4: The Politics of Post-Crsis Challenges in Education

JICE special issue on 'The Politics of Post-Crisis Challenges in Education' Spotlight on Education and Youth Activism in the Philippines Continuing our mini-series introducing the Journal of International Cooperation in Education , this episode focuses on a recent special issue on the theme of 'The Politics of Post-Crisis Challenges Confronting Education', edited by Latika Gupta and Edward Vickers. The theme is taken from that of the 2023 conference of the Comparartive Education Society of Asia, which was held in Hiroshima, Japan. Edward Vickers begins by briefly discussing this theme of 'crisis', and the way in which the special issue tackles it. He provides an overview of the articles in the issue, which include an edited transcript of a panel discussion [Vickers%20E,%20Bryan%20A,%20Elfert%20M,%20Fernando%20N,%20Rizvi%20F%20(2025),%20%22Discussion:%20Crisis?%20What%20crisis?%20International%20organisations,%20crisis%20narratives%20and%20education%20policy%20debate%22.%20Journal%20of%20International%20Cooperation%20in%20Education,%20Vol.%2027%20No.%203%20pp.%20309%E2%80%93328,%20doi:%20https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-11-2025-070] at the CESA conference in which he, Fazal Rizvi, Maren Elfert, Audrey Bryan and Nishara Fernando discussed 'international organisations, crisis narratives and education policy debate'. The discussion then turns to this episode's featured article by Chris Millora, on 'informal learning and youth social action in the Philippines'. Joining the conversation with Ed and Chris is Mark Maca, who has extensively researched the history and politics of education in the contemporary Philippines. Among the issues Ed, Chris and Mark discuss is whether, or in what sense, the Philippines today should be seen as a society 'in crisis'. To the extent that it should be, they interrogate the nature of that crisis and its educational implications. Mark, whose work focuses primarily on formal schooling, explains the role of the school curriculum in teaching about citizenship and recent changes in this respect. He reflects on the significance of formal schooling in moulding Filipino citizens. Chris focuses in his article not on formal but on informal learning about citizenship. He explains what he means by 'informal' learning, and why he sees it as important. The data for his paper comes from case studies of two youth activist groups in the Filipino region of Iloilo: Youth4Health, which seeks to raise HIV awareness, and Buligag Youth, which works to enhance youth involvement in local governance and politics. Chris discusses who these young people were: their social and educational backgrounds, and their reasons for engaging in activism. He reflects on how their activism influences their experience of citizenship, and briefly discusses how they have moved on from activism, and whether any have become involved in formal politics. Further reading: Gupta L, Vickers E (2025), "Editorial: The politics of post-crisis challenges confronting education". Journal of International Cooperation in Education, Vol. 27 No. 3 pp. 225–230, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-11-2025-069 [https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-11-2025-069] Millora C (2025), "Young people “learning to become” active citizens: informal learning and youth social action in the Philippines". Journal of International Cooperation in Education, Vol. 27 No. 3 pp. 231–245, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-02-2024-0007 [https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-02-2024-0007] Vickers E, Bryan A, Elfert M, Fernando N, Rizvi F (2025), "Discussion: Crisis? What crisis? International organisations, crisis narratives and education policy debate". Journal of International Cooperation in Education, Vol. 27 No. 3 pp. 309–328, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-11-2025-070 [https://doi.org/10.1108/JICE-11-2025-070]

12. Apr. 2026 - 1 h 4 min
Episode Series 6, Episode 3: Introducing the Journal of International Cooperation in Education (JICE) Cover

Series 6, Episode 3: Introducing the Journal of International Cooperation in Education (JICE)

Introducing the Journal of International Cooperation in Education In this episode, the first of a 'mini-series' on the Journal of International Cooperation in Education (JICE), Edward Vickers talks to Tatsuya Kusakabe and Sakata Nozomi, the journal's editors. In three subsequent episodes, Ed will introduce themes discussed in recent special issues of JICE. First, however, this conversation with Prof. Kusakabe and Dr. Nozomi introduces the overall goals and scope of the journal. JICE is managed by Hiroshima University and is published by Emerald. The journal is affiliated to the Comparative Education Society of Asia. JICE is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal that engages with unconventional approaches to educational development and knowledge generation. The term ‘International Cooperation’ denotes the Journal’s vision that education can be a process of cooperation, with non-hierarchical, horizontal relationships among stakeholders. Since its official launch in 1998, JICE has become an alternative venue for generating non-Western-centric knowledge in educational development. JICE aims to contribute to accumulating field-level knowledge, policymaking and development strategies in the global South while espousing an unconventional mode of international cooperation in education. For more information on JICE, visit the journal website at https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/jice [https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/jice] Further reading: Hayashi, A. (2021). "Some Japanese ways of conducting comparative educational research". Comparative Education, 57(2), 147–158. https://doi.org/10.1080/03050068.2020.1805862 [https://doi.org/10.1080/03050068.2020.1805862]

11. Apr. 2026 - 45 min
Episode Series 6, Episode 2: Catherine Aymé on teaching French in Central Asia Cover

Series 6, Episode 2: Catherine Aymé on teaching French in Central Asia

Series 6, Episode 2 Catherine Aymé on teaching French in Central Asia In this episode of the Asian Education Podcast, we are joined by Catherine Aymé, who is a teacher and researcher at Sorbonne University Paris Nord in Information and Communication Science. Her doctoral research explores some of the intercultural tensions between France and Uzbekistan, focusing on ‘French as a second language’ educational resources that circulate in Uzbek universities. This episode focuses on issues related to language education, the context in which educational resources are developed and circulated, and how they are actually used. Situated on the Silk Road, Uzbekistan represents a link between China, Turkey and Europe. It has become an alternative destination for many institutions and companies that have lost access to Russia after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We discuss the geopolitical implications of this for the regions external ties, in education and more broadly. We then discuss the general state of French language education in Uzbekistan. In her doctoral thesis, Catherine considers educational resources as “composites”, cultural objects circulating in society, drawing on the work of Joëlle Le Marec in the field of information and communication science. Here she explains what this approach can tell us about the cultural politics of French language education in Central Asia, highlighting several intercultural tensions that her work has illuminated. Finally, we discuss how French language teaching in Uzbekistan relates to the broader context of second / foreign language education in a society where Russian and (more recently) English have dominated the foreign language curriculum. We ask what factors have determined the relative popularity of these languages amongst local learners. Links to the work of researchers mentioned in the interview: Pierre Moeglin, Professor in Information and Communication Science on Industrialisation of education Français : https://shs.cairn.info/industrialiser-l-education--9782842925475?lang=fr [https://shs.cairn.info/industrialiser-l-education--9782842925475?lang=fr] Joëlle Le Marec, Professor in Information and Communication Science at the  French National Museum of Natural History, laboratoire PALOC. on "Composites" in communication Français : https://shs.cairn.info/revue-etudes-de-communication-2002-1-page-2?lang=en [https://shs.cairn.info/revue-etudes-de-communication-2002-1-page-2?lang=en] Alex Frame, Professor in Information and Communication Science University of Burgundy on interculturality Anglais : https://www.academia.edu/6311710/Frame_A_On_Cultures_and_Interactions_Theorising_the_Complexity_of_Intercultural_Encounters [https://www.academia.edu/6311710/Frame_A_On_Cultures_and_Interactions_Theorising_the_Complexity_of_Intercultural_Encounters] https://hal.science/hal-00441666/file/culture_interculturality_frame.pdf [https://hal.science/hal-00441666/file/culture_interculturality_frame.pdf] Fred Dervin, Professor of Multicultural Education, Helsinki University on multiculturalism in education Anglais : https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261550749_Multicultural_Education_in_Finland_Renewed_Intercultural_Competences_to_the_Rescue_In_International_Journal_of_Multicultural_Education_14_3_pp_1-13 [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261550749_Multicultural_Education_in_Finland_Renewed_Intercultural_Competences_to_the_Rescue_In_International_Journal_of_Multicultural_Education_14_3_pp_1-13]

26. März 2026 - 1 h 11 min
Episode Series 6, Episode 1 Cover

Series 6, Episode 1

Introducing the Little Red Podcast. Sample episode: Education Nation - China's Exam Fetish [https://omny.fm/shows/the-little-red-podcast/education-nation-china-s-exam-fetish?in_playlist=podcast] China’s college exam, the gaokao, is fetishized as the ultimate test, yet a lesser-known story is how it entrenches regional education discrimination. Its role at social engineering is also clear, with AI suddenly becoming the sixth most popular major in China, on command from above. This month, the Little Red Podcast sets the first ever podcast gaokao. The intrepid test-takers are Edward Vickers from Kyushu University, co-author of Education and Society in Post-Mao China and host of the Asian Education Podcast, Karron Huang, who is studying for a Masters in early childhood education at the University of Melbourne and sat the gaokao in 2015, and Ruixue Xia from the University of California San Diego who coauthored The Highest Exam: How the Gaokao Shapes China. The Little Red Podcast: interviews and chat celebrating China beyond the Beijing beltway. Hosted by Graeme Smith, China studies academic at the Australian National University's Department of Pacific Affairs and Louisa Lim, former China correspondent for the BBC and NPR, now with the Centre for Advancing Journalism at Melbourne University. We are the 2018 winners of podcast of the year in the News & Current Affairs category of the Australian Podcast Awards. Follow us @limlouisa and @GraemeKSmith, and find show notes at www.facebook.com/LittleRedPodcast For more episodes of the Little Red Podcast, visit the show's website: Little Red Podcast [https://omny.fm/shows/the-little-red-podcast]

3. Jan. 2026 - 1 min
Episode Introducing 'Education and Development in Contemporary Asia' (bonus series) Cover

Introducing 'Education and Development in Contemporary Asia' (bonus series)

Introduction to Education and Development in Contemporary Asia (bonus series): Access to the whole series is password-protected. For details on terms of access, write to: edvickers08@gmail.com In a new initiative, the Asian Education Podcast is releasing an MA module on 'Education and Development in Contemporary Asia'. Designed for hybrid delivery, this provides a historical overview of education’s role in the political, social and economic development of contemporary Asian societies. Each episode features a conversation between the presenter, Edward Vickers, and an invited expert, with episode notes providing a brief outline, guiding questions and recommended readings (as well as links to further materials). The series/module begins by critically considering the educational significance of legacies of colonialism and imperialism across the region, while emphasising the need to acknowledge indigenous agency and the salience of non-Western forms of ‘hegemony’. A central theme concerns the importance of politics to any understanding of education, in Asia or elsewhere. The role of schooling in national identity formation in post-colonial or post-revolutionary societies is crucial here, but so too is the wider function of ‘political socialisation’ in inculcating values of meritocracy, hierarchy and justice. The module traces these and related issues - of inequality (as it intersects with divisions of gender, class, residence and ethnicity); multiculturalism; collectivism (or individualism); educational intensity and credentialism; and the prevalence in public discourse of narrowly instrumentalist conceptions of education’s purposes. Asian societies are often presented in the West today as educational models - but if Asia is seen as offering answers, what are the questions being asked of education, and are they the right ones?

1. Jan. 2026 - 2 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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