Most education research is undertaken in western developed countries.
While some research from developing countries does make it into research
journals from time to time, but these articles only emphasize the rarity
of research in developing countries. The proposed book is unique in that
it will cover education in Papua New Guinea over the millennia. Papua
New Guinea's multicultural society with relatively recent contact with
Europe and the Middle East provides a cameo of the development of
education in a country with both a colonial history and a coup-less
transition to independence. Discussion will focus on specific areas of
mathematics education that have been impacted by policies, research,
circumstances and other influences, with particular emphasis on
pressures on education in the last one and half centuries. This volume
will be one of the few records of this kind in the education research
literature as an in-depth record and critique of how school mathematics
has been grown in Papua New Guinea from the late 1800s, and should be a
useful addition to graduate programs mathematics education courses,
history of mathematics, as well as the interdisciplinary fields of cross
cultural studies, scholarship focusing on globalization and post /
decolonialism, linguistics, educational administration and policy,
technology education, teacher education, and gender studies.