<p><em>Traveller, Nomadic and Migrant Education</em> presents international accounts of approaches to educating mobile communities such as circus and fairground people, herders, hunters, Roma and Travellers. The chapters focus on three key dimensions of educational change: the client group moving from school to school; those schools having their demographics changed and seeking to change the mobile learners; and these learners contributing to fundamental change to the nature of schooling.</p><p>The book brings together decades of research into the challenges and opportunities presented by mobile learners interacting with educational systems predicated on fixed residence. It identifies several obstacles to those learners receiving an equitable education, including negative stereotypes and centuries-old prejudice. Yet the book also explores a number of educational innovations that bring mobility and schooling together, ranging from specialised literacy programs and distance and online education to mobile schools and specially trained teachers. These innovations allow us to think differently about how education can and should be, for mobile and non-mobile learners alike.</p> <p>Foreword: Migrant Education as World Model. <em>Jean-Pierre Liégeois</em>. Preface. <em>William Binchy</em>. Acknowledgments. Editorial Introduction: Three Dimensions of Changing Schools. <em>Máirín Kenny and Patrick Alan Danaher</em> 1. Moving Lives: A Reflective Account of a Three Generation Travelling Attractionist Family in Italy <em>Francesca Gobbo</em> 2. Inclusive Education for Children and Young People with Interrupted Learning in Scotland <em>Pauline Padfield and Gillian Cameron</em> 3. Itinerant Farm Workers’ Children in Australia: Learning from the Experiences of One Family <em>Robyn Henderson</em> 4. Cultural Difference or Subversion in England: A Question of Perspective <em>Martin Levinson </em>5. Promoting Educational Access for the Indigenous Reindeer Herders, Fisherpeople and Hunters in the Nomadic Schools of Yakutia, Russian Federation <em>Vassily A. Robbek, Feodisia V. Gabysheva, Rozalia S. Nikitina and Natalia V. Sitnikova </em>6. Australian Romani <em>Wendy Morrow </em>7. The Telesis of Nigerian Nomadic Education <em>Abdurrahman Umar and Gidado Tahir </em> 8. Irish Travellers, Identity and the Education System <em>Máirín Kenny and Alice Binchy </em>9. The Revitalisation of a Threatened Indigenous Language: The Case of the Sami People in Norway <em>Kamil Özerk </em>10. Paradoxes in Policy: Mixed Messages for Fairground and Gypsy Traveller Families in England <em>Cathy Kiddle </em>11. Australian Circus People <em>Beverley Moriarty </em>12. Against the Odds: Roma Population Schooling in Spain <em>Manuel Souto Otero </em>13. Schooling and the Rabaris of Kachchh in India: The Need for Change <em>Caroline Dyer</em> 14. Inclusion Versus Specialisation: Issues in Transforming the Education of Australian Show Children <em>Geoff Danaher and Patrick Alan Danaher</em>. Conclusion: Whither Changing Schools? <em>Judith Remy Leder</em>. Respondent’s Text <em>Judith A. Gouwens</em></p>
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