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What is Ger

Third-Space Exploration in Education
A traditional Mongolia accommodation consisting of a portable tent structure used by herders for shelter (also called yurt ). A ger has a collapsible circular wooden frame that is covered with felt and heated by a small stove.
Published in Chapter:
Timeless Traditions as a Culturally Responsive Approach in a Third Space: Honoring the Herder Curriculum in Mongolia
Jeanette Haynes Writer (New Mexico State University, USA), Candace Kaye (New Mexico State University, USA), and Javzandulam Batsaikhan (Mongolian National University of Education, Mongolia)
Copyright: © 2023 |Pages: 20
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-8402-9.ch013
Abstract
While herder culture continues to be a powerful symbol of the rich traditional heritage of Mongolia, many herders want their children to become “well educated” and move to urban areas rather than become herders themselves. The adoption of a standardized, urban-oriented content and pedagogy is posing a serious challenge to maintaining the herder cultural identity and Mongolia's national identity. Drawing from the concepts and literature on culturally responsive education and funds of knowledge, the authors explore an educational future for Mongolia that locates strengths in herder knowledge, values, and lifeways as a developed Third Space. This Third Space defines cultural responsiveness to Mongolian herder ways of life within national curriculum, not in the context of a static, sentimental past, but as part of a robust, attainable future for the next generation in the herder culture.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
More Results
Empowerment Through Participatory Action Research and Herder Parents' Play With Their Young Children in Rural Mongolia
A traditional Mongolian accommodation consisting of a portable tent structure used by herders for shelter (also called yurt ). A ger has a collapsible circular wooden frame that is covered with felt and heated by a small stove.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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