Education Faculty Perspectives on a Borrowed Teacher Education Initiative in Northern Pakistan A Call for Engaging the Discourses of Policy Borrowing and Decolonzation

Sarfaroz NIYOZOV, Abdul Wali KHAN

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

Abstract

This qualitative case study examines the Education Faculty Perspectives (EFPs) of the Karakoram Public International University in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan, on teachers’ experiences of a recently introduced education reform (an Honor’s Bachelor of Education program [B. Ed Hons]1 mandated by Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC) in 2010. The B. Ed Hons has replaced the existing pre-service programs nationwide. Our analysis identified several paradoxical themes about borrowing of the B. Ed Hons: at the “talk”/rhetoric level, the program was welcomed as a transformative shift in teacher education; at the “walk”/ implementation level, its practicality and sustainability became complicated; at the decolonization level, the discourses on the colonial nature of knowledge and North-South dependency were muted. Implications for moving from borrowing external “best practices” to producing local solutions are highlighted. The analysis suggests the contextual realities and challenges should be addressed, individual and structural capacities developed, and an incremental, critical-constructive approach to both external and local ideas be pursued, and decolonization discourse included.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)100-127
Number of pages28
JournalJournal of Education in Muslim Societies
Volume5
Issue number2
Early online date18 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Apr 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 International Institute of Islamic Thought.

Keywords

  • best practices
  • decolonisation
  • foreign aid
  • policy borrowing
  • teacher education

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