Department of Educational Science with an emphasis on Humanities and Social Science (UHS), Stockholm
University
Postal
address: Institutionen för utbildningsvetenskap med inriktning mot humaniora och samhällsvetenskap (UHS),
Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm Visiting address: O-huset, Konradsbergsgatan 5 A Web page:http://www.uhs.su.se/
Contact person:Niclas Rönnström,
Senior Lecturer and Study counsellor, phone: +46 (0)8 12076679
In January 2008, the Stockholm Institute of Education merged with Stockholm University. The new Dept. of Educational Science with an emphasis on Humanities and Social Science (UHS) has its roots in the former Dept. of Teaching processes, Communication and Learning, that used to exist within Stockholm Institute of Education.
South Asia related education in the Dept. of Teaching processes, Communication and Learning:
From 1993 the department every year arranged an elective 20 credits
specialization programme on Global Education, led by Dr. Jim Walch. The programme, open to
all admitted students to the Teachers traing programme at the Institute,
consisted of an intensive 10 weeks field work study (called The
Changing South) in Tamil Nadu, India, and a 10 weeks follow-up
course in Sweden afterwards. More than 700 students passed the
programme through the years. Dr. Walch was also the department’s representative
in the so-called ITERMS
(International Teacher Education and Research Multidisciplinary Support)
International Centre. The main task of this
Centre was to meet the increasing
demands for commissioned education and research from third world countries
as well as from new member states of the European Union.
In 2006, the programme was converted into a 10 credits (15 ECTS)
course titled ”Changing India and Ourselves”, led by Kristina Lanå, International representative at the department.
During the Spring 2007 the course ran from January to March. Just like before,
the course consisted of two parts, first five weeks field studies in
Tamil Nadu, India, where the students should confront, analyse and
reflect upon the various patterns of poverty and domination that can
be found in the South and in the relation to the richer parts of the
world; and then five weeks literature
studies and seminars in Sweden. The partner institutions
in Tamil Nadu were St. Joseph’s College in Trichy,
Loyola College in Chennai, N.K. Thirumala Chariar National College
of Education for Women (NKTNCE) in Chennai, Madras Institute
of Development Studies (MIDS), and the Village Community Development
Society, VCDS, in Vellakulam.
The course again ran in the early 2008 and 2009 (January–March). It is now led by the two lecturers Margareta Adolphson and Bodil Nilsson, both from UHS. The next course will be run in the Spring 2010. Last date for applications is 15 October 2009. More
information.
In February 2006 Jim Walch received a SASNET
planning grant for a project called ” Teacher
education in the field: Facilitating thesis work in South India.” The
project aimed at formalising relationships with educational institutions
in Tamil Nadu, in order to facilitate for Swedish students to do their
didactic theses and project work in India, and lead to having more
teachers in the future with a knowledge of the South. Two members of
the ITERMS team visited South India in October-November 2006 in order
to strenghten and further develop existing cooperation and form new
alliances.
Project abstract: This is a network planning project
with the specific goal of formalizing relationships in order to enable
an expected large number of students from the Stockholm Institute of
Education, Sweden’s largest teacher training institution, to carrying
out didactical research projects in education at the senior thesis and
Masters level and to prepare the way for similar field work in a projected
European Joint Masters in Global Education. The motivation for this project
is to help correct the bad state of teaching about the South in general
and South Asia in particular, in schools. Over the past fifteen years,
about 700 students and teachers have participated in undergraduate courses
in South India organized by the SIE. This will continue and the present
project is to expand and strengthen resources so that other categories
of students can do meaningful work in the field. We plan to expand the
number of academic and NGO partners and to sign contracts so that students
from the SIE will receive proper guidance. The newly formed centre at
the SIE, ITERMS (see information above) is the
focal point for this type of work.
As a result from the SASNET funded journey, MoUs were signed with
Loyola College and NKT
National College of Education for Women (NKTNCE, affiliated to the University
of Madras), both in Chennai. Loyola College, South India’s leading
institution, is starting teacher education from the academic year 2007-08.
Several new areas of cooperation were discussed with NKTNCE. One is in
the area of Early Childhood Education, an area of SIE expertise. Another
is a three part cooperation around curriculum development in the field
of low-vision(special education together with the NIVH (National Institute
for the Visually Handicapped , South India regional office in Poonamalai).
Both the NIVH and NKTNCE have assumed pioneering roles in this area in
teacher educatuion in South India, along with the Ramakrishna College
in Coimbatore.
Contact was established with another institution for teacher education
in Chennai, Stella Maris, one of the largest of its kind in South India,
also affiliated to the University of Madras.
Several discussions and meetings were also held with the Social
Watch
– Tamilnadu research group, stationed in Choolamaidu in Chennai.
Just like SIE, this organisation is constantly under pressure to council
and advise young researchers from Europe (and the USA), and therefore
a more permant cooperation to deal with this was discussed.
Another key component in the strategy to keep the SIE courses to Tamil
Nadu going in spite of a major reorganisation that currently takes
place regarding teachers training in the Stockholm area, is
to involve other International actors. One is Canterbury
Christ Church University, UK, where a similar course has been created,
and another possible partner for cooperatyion is the teacher education
at Blaagaard Seminarium, a teachers training
college in Copenhagen, Denmark. Such International collaboration may possibly
mean that the undergraduate India program can be saved.
Research connected to South Asia
Dr. Jim Walch has been working
on a research project called ”Encountering
India – A Study in Cross-Cultural relearning”,
based on experiences from running of the course ”The Changing South”
since 1994. The project deals with how people from Europe react when confronted
with an Indian reality, how preconceived notions and perspectives are
turned upside down. He tries to expose why the European perspectives are
so limited and culturally coloured by Orientalist ideology, congenially
described by Edward W. Said in his book ”Orientalism
– Western Conceptions of the Orient”. The project would result in a book supposedly published in the Fall of 2004. More
information on the research project (as a pdf-file).
Project abstract: Why do we call the spot on the forehead
of an Indian woman a ”caste mark” when this is not a mark
of caste? Why do we believe that all cows in India are holy for everyone?
And read in the newspaper that the export of beef from India is a growing
and important enterprise. Where did we learn these things? More importantly,
why have we learnt this? What more preconceptions of the ”Oriental
Other” do we harbor, perhaps not consciously? How are these
preconceptions reproduced and how can we deconstruct and reconstruct
our orientalist conceptualizations? Can these preconceptions and
attitudes be made visible through a close encounter? These are the
questions Dr Walch is working with in his research project.
SASNET - Swedish South Asian Studies Network/Lund
University
Address: Scheelevägen 15 D, SE-223 70 Lund, Sweden
Phone: +46 46 222 73 40
Webmaster: Lars Eklund
Last updated
2009-04-06