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Last modified: 2007-10-24

CIECAP

The Comparative and International Education Course Archive Project (CIECAP) is a special project of the Center for Comparative Education, and an activity of the Comparative and International Education Graduate Student Association (CIEGSA) at Loyola University Chicago. CIECAP has also been endorsed as a project of the World Council of Comparative Education ocieties. CIECAP is on-line database of salient features of the introductory course in comparative education as taught at universities around the world. It is an important addition to the growing body of research on the nature of the field itself, including its form and parameters. The project's unique contribution to this research is an accessible archive of key elements of the introductory course including unit topics, referenced articles, journals and texts, as well as the interests and specializations of comparative education course instructors.

There are several specific purposes to CIECAP. First, teachers either planning to teach or already teaching comparative education can use this site as a tool for designing their course syllabi, and for comparing their course to what is being taught in other programs. Surveys of CIES members engaged in teaching comparative education have found little consensus in the field regarding influential figures, works, and themes. Rather, the field remains strongly heterogeneous and ever changing. The CIECAP site is able to illuminate this dynamic characteristic of the field in a way that bolsters critical self-inquiry and allows instructors to situate their course within the broader context of what is happening in comparative education programs nationally and internationally.

Closely related to this purpose, through maintaining an archive of articles, texts and journals referenced in introductory courses, CIECAP contributes to the evolving discussion regarding a comparative and international education "canon." In a November 2001 CER article on teaching comparative and international education, Leon Tikly and Michael Crossley defined the field's canon as "a body of literature that is recognized by teachers and practitioners of comparative and international education as encompassing the major areas of knowledge, issues, axioms, theoretical frameworks, and methodologies that define comparative and international education as a field of study." CIECAP operates from this definition of a canon, recognizing, as do the authors, that it is far from being a fixed entity, and that in many cases it comprises a contested terrain.

A third closely related purpose to CIECAP is that over time it will provide a rich source of information for analysis of directions in which the field appears to be moving. Working from the assumption that a field's contours and boundaries are best discerned through assessing the thoughts and actions of its practitioners, we believe that ongoing documentation of the introductory course is an effective form of such assessment.

Finally, prospective students interested in pursuing graduate study in comparative education will be able to review course outline information to get a sense of the field. As CIECAP also contains information on instructor interests and specializations, students utilizing the database can make more informed choices regarding the institution at which they would like to pursue their study.

Website: http://www.luc.edu/cce/ciecap.shtml