Bursary Recipients 2017

Some of the 2017 Bursary recipients

In 2017, we have been able to offer assistance to 23 individuals enabling them to attend and present at the Conference as follows:

 

 

 

Sushan Acharya, Tribhuvan University – Women, literacy and health in Nepal: an alternative approach for sustainable livelihoods

Cyril Brandt, University of Amsterdam – Including Refugees and IDPs: searching for sustainable education solutions in contexts of protracted displacement.

Alison Bukhari, Educate Girls – Outcomes incentivised funding improves results for both enrolment and learning for girls facing exclusion from school in rural India

Rui da Silva, Center of African Studies of the University of Porto – Teachers´ support in challenging situations: reflections from a teacher professional development programme sustainability in Guinea-Bissau

Marcos Delprato, University of Cambridge – On the impact of aspirations on learning levels of indigenous students in Latin America

Foster Gondwe, Hiroshima University – Comparative policies on Educating Teachers as Researchers: Cases of Japan, Thailand and Malawi

Doris M. Kakuru, Uganda Technology and Management University – Insights into the learning crisis in Ugandas primary education.

Shreekanth Mahendiran,
Centre for Budget and Policy Studies – Can Open Schooling enable Inclusion at Secondary level education: Evidence from India

Burcu Meltem Arik Akyuz, Education Reform Initiative (ERI) – Critical glance on the new Turkish curriculum in building sustainability and co-existence

Sabina Morley, University of Oxford – How do school users assess teaching and learning in secondary schools in Uganda? Can their actions lead to quality improvements?

Goretti Nakabugo, Twaweza East Africa – The role of citizen-led assessments in promoting learning for all

Mansi Nanda, ASER Centre – Early-years education in rural India: how do parents assess teaching and learning?

Maithreyi R, Centre for Budget and Policy Studies – Rethinking Learning Assessments: Insights from a Study on the Status of Education in Tribal Districts in Maharashtra (India)

Fizza Raza, IDEAS – Towards inclusion in teaching and learning in India and Pakistan’s primary schools

Timothy Reedy, University of Maryland-College Park – Eco-Socialism Education in Cuba: Some Reflections on Global Alternatives

Hiba Salem, University of Cambridge – My Life in Jordan: An exploration of Syrian refugee students’ perceptions of wellbeing

Amina Singh, Kathmandu University – What can ‘mainstream’ education gain from a deeper understanding about indigenous knowledges and adult learning?

Matt Somerville, University of Cambridge – Towards inclusion in teaching and learning in India and Pakistan’s primary schools

Sugata Sumida, Hiroshima University – What are the learning needs in developing countries: A case study of Mozambique

Peter Sutoris, University of Cambridge – (De)Politicising Education for Sustainable Development: An Ethnography on the ‘Margins’

Gayatri Vaidya, Educational Initiatives – Future skills – and inequalities? 21st Century Skills in low and middle-income countries

Tassew Woldehanna, Addis Ababa University – A Rising Tide of Access: What Consequences for Inclusive Learning and Sustainable Development in Ethiopia?