Curriculum Vitaes

MARIA MANZON

  (MANZON MARIA)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Human Sciences, Department of Education, Sophia University
Degree
B.S. Business Administration and Accountancy(University of the Philippines)
学士(経営管理会計学)(フィリピン大学)
Master of Education(The University of Hong Kong)
修士号(教育学)(香港大学)
Doctor of Philosophy(The University of Hong Kong)
博士号(哲学)(香港大学)

Contact information
miemanzonsophia.ac.jp
Other name(s) (e.g. nickname)
Maria Manzon
J-GLOBAL ID
201901007758025110
researchmap Member ID
7000029874

2004-2009: The University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Education, research on Comparative Education: The Construction of a Field.
2013-2016: Nanyang Technological University, National Institute of Education (Singapore), Office of Education Research, research on Asian Pedagogies: Singapore as a Microcosm; research on Engaging Parents as Supportive Partners: A Baseline Study of Singapore Practices.
2016-2019: The Education University of Hong Kong, Department of International Education and Lifelong Learning, research on Minority Parent Engagement in Hong Kong Secondary Schools: Capabilities for Social Justice.

RESEARCH AREA: Comparative Education.
I would like to expand my work on the global histories of comparative education to explore the unique contributions from Asia, from the perspective of the feminine genius, spirituality, and values education.

I would also like to research on sustainability from an integral human development perspective drawing on historical, ethical, and theological literature, and translate these to education for well-being and happiness of human society.

COURSES TAUGHT:
- Introduction to Comparative Education
- Seminar in Comparative Education
- Comparative Education in Asia
- Experiencing the Miracle of Life
- God, Man and the World: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Sustainable Development

(Subject of research)
Asian Pedagogies: Singapore as a Microcosm
Engaging Parents as Supportive Partners: A Baseline Study of Singapore Practices
Minority Parent Engagement in Hong Kong Secondary Schools: Capabilities for Social Justice


Papers

 28
  • Manzon, Maria
    Comparative Education, 1-2, Sep 13, 2024  Peer-reviewedInvited
  • Manzon, Maria
    Journal of Comparative Education (JCES), 66 109-125, Feb, 2023  InvitedLead author
  • Melvin Chan, Maria Manzon, Helen Hong, Lana Y. L. Khong
    British Journal of Educational Psychology, Aug 24, 2021  Peer-reviewed
  • Maria Manzon
    COMPARATIVE EDUCATION, 56(1) 96-110, Jan, 2020  Peer-reviewedInvited
    Action follows from being. One's way of doing and understanding comparative education follows from one's being. It springs from the soul. Using [Kim, T., and R. Brooks' (2013). "Internationalisation, Mobile Academics, and Knowledge Creation in Universities: A Comparative Analysis." SRHE Research Award (2011/12) Final Report] framework on the relationship between academic mobility and knowledge creation, I will reflect here on my personal and intellectual journey and how it has shaped my work on comparative histories of the field of comparative education. As this article is written, I am commencing a new transition in my professional life, this time in Japan. I am reflecting on a possible new research agenda building on my past work and the new panorama opened from my new vantage point in the field.
  • Maria Manzon
    Routledge international handbook of schools and schooling in Asia, May, 2018  
    This chapter presents research on the theme of private supplementary tutoring in four regions of Asia. They converge in their concept of private tutoring as the practice of fee-paying tutoring in academic subjects provided outside standard school hours. This may take the form of instruction to individuals, small groups or large classes, both directly and through virtual classrooms. Scholars have used the metaphor of "shadow education" to depict how private tutoring mimics mainstream education systems. The chapter examines Bourdieusian social theory. It reviews private tuition as a social practice resulting from a triadic interaction among habitus, capital and field. The chapter illuminates the "shadows" in Asian education. Some governments turn a blind eye to this social practice, as it enables them to retain teachers in the profession at a lower cost. These irregularities, however, lead to other problems, such as corruption on the part of teachers and/or school leaders. Copyright © 2018 selection and editorial matter, Kerry J. Kennedy and John Chi-Kin Lee; individual chapters, the contributors.
  • Maria Manzon
    Comparative Education, 54(1) 94-107, Jan 2, 2018  Peer-reviewedInvited
    Comparative education is two centuries old. Many mainstream historical narratives claim that the field began with the iconic opus of Marc-Antoine Jullien de Paris (1817). This article offers to re-theorise the histories of comparative education. It suggests casting a far-sighted and panoramic look at the field’s origins. An underlying assumption in these histories is the embeddedness of comparative education in ever-changing world orders. The article concludes with a puzzle for future work on a global history of comparative education.
  • Maria Manzon
    EUROPEAN EDUCATION, 50(2) 116-118, 2018  
    Emphasizing the important role of “history” within comparative education is the classic way, much celebrated in the writings of Andreas Kazamias, to treat this theme. This article uses a different perspective. The argument is that “comparative education” and “history” use two words as professional identifiers of a way of thinking and working. Metaphorically, they are wizard words, magical claims that mark off different epistemic territories: “context” for comparative education and “archive” for the historian. The construction and—especially—the confusions, the contradictions, and the consequences within these codings of professional identity and the relationships of the two fields of study are the themes of this article about comparative education.
  • Maria Manzon
    COMPARATIVE EDUCATION, 54(1) 1-9, 2018  Peer-reviewedInvited
    This article questions some of our assumptions about the history of comparative education. It explores new scholarship on key actors and ways of knowing in the field. Building on the theory of the social constructedness of the field of comparative education, the paper elucidates how power shapes our scholarly histories and identities.
  • Maria Manzon
    The SAGE Handbook of Research on Teacher Education, Aug 16, 2017  
  • Maria Manzon
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 37(3) 283-298, 2017  Peer-reviewedInvited
    Comparative education in Asia is witnessing changing discourses, structural opportunities, and invigorated leadership. This article will review the institutionalization of comparative education in Asia from a sociological perspective, drawing on Bourdieu's theory on the logic of social practice. After giving an overview of the historical roots of Asian comparative education, I will describe broadly its landscape noting developments in the last two decades since 1995, the foundational year of the Comparative Education Society of Asia (CESA). Four main themes are explored: comparative education teaching, professional societies, research centres, and specialist publications. With a baseline understanding of the infrastructures of the field in Asia and the power dynamics that shape them, I will propose an agenda for Asian comparative education to offer meaningful contributions to multipolar knowledge production in the field. Priority themes and directions will be highlighted to articulate a stronger Asian voice and leadership in an increasingly diverse and uncertain world.
  • Mark Bray, Maria Manzon
    Comparative Education Review (Beijing), 11(310) 38-45, 2015  Peer-reviewed
  • Wing On Lee, Maria Manzon
    Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 23(4) 823-833, Dec, 2014  
    ‘Equity and Quality’ is an emerging terminology that focuses on the quality of education rather than on ‘excellence’. The global policy discourse is turning towards levelling up educational quality for all. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) 2012 report entitled Equity and Quality in Education: Supporting Disadvantaged Students and Schools claimed that the highest performing education systems (HPES) across OECD countries are those that combine high quality and equity. In such education systems, the vast majority of students can attain high level skills and knowledge that depend on their ability and drive, more than on their socio-economic background. Paradoxically, among the HPES are three East Asian systems—China, Hong Kong and Singapore—characterized by a huge income disparity between the rich and the poor with their above-40 Gini indices. Nevertheless, their high average scores in PISA 2009 illustrate that the average quality of education in respect to learning outcomes provided in these education systems are of a very high quality which benefits the whole population regardless of the socio-economic conditions of the students. How can these seemingly contradictory claims and evidences be explained? Can educational equity and quality co-exist within a highly unequal society? This article attempts to offer some explanations taking Hong Kong as an illustrative case. Employing Bourdieu’s logic of practice, the article argues that both cultural habitus and structural contexts account for the achievement, albeit contested, of educational equity and quality in Hong Kong.
  • Maria Manzon, Shaljan Areepattamannil
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 34(4) 389-402, Oct, 2014  Peer-reviewedInvited
    Private supplementary tutoring, also widely known as shadow education, is becoming a global phenomenon and an object of international scholarship. Private tutoring has multiple forms and positions across educational systems and levels, thus the term "shadow educations". Asia is a notable location of shadow education activity. This editorial article maps the global discourse on shadow educations, using an expanded framework for analysis based on the Bray and Thomas cube. Against this backdrop, Asian research on shadow education presented in this special issue is introduced and its contribution to the global discourse is highlighted. A possible global research agenda is offered with the hope that new understandings derived from scholarly research may aid stakeholders in achieving the aims of education.
  • Mark Bray, Maria Manzon
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 34(2) 228-248, Apr, 2014  Peer-reviewedInvited
    The institutional framework of the field of comparative education has developed significantly in recent decades. One manifestation of development has been the establishment and activities of professional societies. This paper focuses on 12 societies that operate in Asia and the Pacific. Some of these societies have long histories while others are recent creations. The paper considers the geographic and conceptual remits of these societies, and their activities including organization of conferences and publication of journals. Patterns are viewed through the lenses of literature on intellectual fields and on academic tribes and territories.
  • Wing On Lee, Diane B. Napier, Maria Manzon
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 34(2) 139-152, Apr, 2014  Peer-reviewedInvited
    This introductory article serves as a hermeneutical tool for interpreting the subsequent articles in this special issue, which explores the nature and roles of comparative education in the 21st century within the context of a changing world order and the growing prominence of comparative education in the Asia-Pacific region. A review of the evolution of different genres of comparative educations reveals the importance of contextual considerations as a constant ritornello (a refrain or instrumental interlude) in comparative education research. Reflections on comparative education in dialectical perspectives in this article provide new impetus and enlightenment on contemporary issues in education and society. Seeing comparative education as a dialectic process enhances the openness of comparative education to challenge the status quo perception of issues, and provides a compare-and-contrast perspective to identify polemic interpretations, such as empirical epistemology which can be viewed as a subjectivity that rejects the transcendental sources of knowledge. Dynamic secularism can be a friend of, and coexist with, religion as it ironically provides more opportunities for more religions to co-exist harmoniously under secularism than many countries that adopt a national religion. The dialectics of comparative education opens up a new role for comparative education to accommodate polemic perspectives to co-exist and to recognize the equal importance of universality and particularity.
  • Maria Manzon
    2014  
  • Maria Manzon
    2014  
  • Maria Manzon
    Comparative Education Bulletin, 13 3-12, 2011  Peer-reviewedInvited
  • Maria Manzon
    Revue « Education Comparée », 3 113-141, 2010  Peer-reviewedInvited
  • Mark Bray, Maria Manzon
    Revista Española de Educación Comparada, 11 189-213, 2005  Peer-reviewedInvited
  • Maria Manzon
    Comparative Education Bulletin, 9 5-22, 2005  Peer-reviewed

Misc.

 8

Books and Other Publications

 40

Presentations

 41

Research Projects

 7

Social Activities

 11