SOCIAL STUDIES – SEMESTER 3 REVISION (GLOBALISATION IN EDUCATION) QUESTION FROM GROUP 5: -Describe the impact of globalisation on current education policies and programmes in Malaysia‚ Globalisation‚ an unseen force has affected tremendously nations around the world. It has affected many aspects namely economic‚ the society‚ communication technology and even education policies. In this case Malaysia is no free from the affects mainly on its education policies and programmes. As the year progresses
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Argument 1: Globalisation or ‘Gobble-isation’ - Globalization: to extend to other or all parts of the globe; make worldwide. - Eg. Africa‚ a third world country due to anti-globalization - Evident that globalization is inevitable‚ thus we cope with it to survive - The meaning‚ extend to other parts of the globe‚ means competition with other countries - Run by the bigger companies and influential people in the world‚ we as common people cannot make a known difference.
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GLOBALISATION – The world today has been described as a ‘global village’‚ this stems from Marshall Mc Luhan’s concept that ‘the globe has been contracted into a village by electric technology and the instantaneous movement of information from every quarter to every point at the same time’. Mc Luhan has only described one aspect of how the world has become a global village. A closer examination of globalisation will indicate that indeed the barriers of space‚ time and borders which once existed
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Globalisation‚ Causes and Consequences: The 21st century is the world of globalisation where people living in Australia have the Laptop made in China‚ Food produced in India and the dresses made in France. According to Oden (2001) globalisation has accelerated in the rapid pace in the last two decades. The new dynamic of the political‚ economic‚ financial‚ social and cultural forces of globalisation has been brought by the scientific and technical information revolution. It has also increase the
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Conceptualising Globalisation Globalisation is generally recognised as a long contemporary process driven by the rapid development of information technology and other forces to link and expend human activities‚ to construct the power of state and economic organisations through the elimination of space and the generation of time (Held‚ McGrew‚ Goldblatt and Perraton‚ 1999‚ p.13‚ Orga‚ 2012‚ p. 154-158‚ Waters‚ 2001‚ p. 1-5‚ 15‚ ). This growing interconnectedness has made both positive and
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the theme of globalisation and its many forms. From the emancipatory scenario to the doomsday picture – nothing has been left out of imagination. Initially writers wrote of fast flowing capital‚ newer forms of assemblages‚ refined versions of neoFordism‚ etc. Sociologists were not behind in these imaginations. Themes of global identity‚ placelessness‚ rootlessness‚ migration and formation of new diasporas‚ marked these writings. Then came the phase of writings on “subaltern globalisation” with focus
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Globalisation a11d Nike GLOBALISATION Globalisation is the growing relations of international markets and it involves the economic activity in the production of goods and services among countries. It involves aspects such as growth and productivity‚ employment and skills wages and unequal distribution in wages both internationally as within a country. Hence‚ the belief that globalisation leads to growth is present all over both the works of Friedman and Norberg‚ but can be illustrated by a quote
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decentralization are secure new markets or to stop their rivals getting there first. The movement of capital away from the USA and Western Europe after the 1970s was also partly to do with the difficulties of securing high profits and subordinating the labour force in the industrialized countries. Many developing countries had abundant supplies of cheap‚ unorganized labour. The division of labour into more minute skilled and semi-skilled tasks‚ that allowed untrained or newly trained workers to attain rapidly
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Main reasons that have caused globalisation 1. Improved transport‚ making global travel easier. For example‚ there has been a rapid growth in air-travel‚ enabling greater movement of people and goods across the globe. 2. Containerisation. From 1970‚ there was a rapid adoption of the steel transport container. This reduced the costs of inter-modal transport making trade cheaper and more efficient. 3. Improved technology which makes it easier to communicate and share information around the world.
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Globalisation is Westernisation Globalisation is Westernisation‚ and aspects of ‘the West’ can be found all around the world today – from the consumer culture of Western capitalism (with cultural icons such as McDonald’s‚ Coca-Cola‚ Levi Jeans and Starbucks)‚ the spread of European languages (such as English)‚ styles of dress‚ eating habits and TV viewing habits (Tomlinson‚ 2002). Tomlinson (2002) notes that globalisation is “the rapidly developing process of complex interconnections between
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