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Kostenfrei zugängliche Publikationen aus dem Bereich der internationalen schulischen Bildungsmedienforschung

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    History of phases in textbook revisions at the 1928 Oslo conference from the Hungarain perspective
    (2016-02) Albert, Gábor B.
    This study is focused on phases of the textbook revision movement and textbook debates from the Oslo Conference organized by the International Committee of Historians in 1928. It is based on interviews by the contemporary Norwegian newspaper “Aftenposten” and on reports to the Hungarian Ministry of Education written by the Hungarian conference delegate, Sandor Domanovszky, one of the greatest Hungarian historians and authors of textbooks. Further, the author examines Kuno Klebelsberg’s (leader of the Hungarian Ministry of Education between 1922 and 1931) attitudes to the textbook issue. After World War I the Hungarian textbook revision movement was examined in depth by the institutions of the League of Nations, and at events of the International Committee of Historical Science (Comité International des Sciences Historiques – CISH). The textbook revision movement aimed to filter out tendentious and distorted prejudices towards other nations in history textbooks.
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    Educational sector, reforms, curricula and textbooks in selected MENA countries. Images of 'Self' and 'Other' in textbooks of Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon and Oman
    (Georg-Eckert-Institut für Internationale Schulbuchforschung, 2011) Pingel, Falk; Kröhnert-Othman, Susanne
    This report is based on a project conducted by the Georg Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research (GEI) from 2006 to 2009, focusing on textbook revision and educational reforms in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). The project was funded by the German Foreign Office. The GEI’s principal aim was to contribute to a constructive dialogue between European and Muslim majority countries of the MENA region. For this purpose, a broad network of scholars, curriculum experts and representatives of Ministries of Education (MOE) from both regions was established during the four-year duration of the project. The network examined, assessed and exchanged views on the various education systems.