Nadeem Memon
University of South Australia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nadeem Memon.
Leadership and Policy in Schools | 2007
Kenneth Leithwood; Blair Mascall; Tiiu Strauss; Robin Sacks; Nadeem Memon; Anna Yashkina
In this study, we inquired about patterns of leadership distribution, as well as which leadership functions were performed by whom, the characteristics of nonadministrative leaders, and the factors promoting and inhibiting the distribution of leadership functions. We consider our account of distributed leadership in this district to be a probable example of “best practice” at the present time—not perfect, but likely more mature than average by a significant degree. The most noteworthy detail to emerge from our study was the critical part played by formal school and district leaders in helping to foster apparently productive forms of distributed leadership.
Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs | 2011
Sarfaroz Niyozov; Nadeem Memon
Drawing on a number of primary and secondary sources, the paper identifies major perspectives and debates on themes, issues, challenges, developments important in the field of Islamic education. Against the backdrop of the rise of religious discourse and politics in the public sphere, this paper (i) discusses the sources and evolution of the concept of education as a discipline in the Muslim world; (ii) situates Islamic education within the wider Islamization project and examines the need to re-conceptualize the concept within the epistemological and ethical perspectives while balancing it with a re-examination of self and the appreciation of the ‘other’; (iii) explores the educational implications of the Muslims vs. the West divide, (iv) highlights the proliferation of Islamic schools and the concomitant innovative ideas globally; and (vi) suggests insights into improving Islamic education in the twenty-first century. The paper highlights the continuity and change in these themes across time and space. The paper finally concludes that Islamic education has reached a cross-road. To succeed in the new millennium will require ingenuity and collaboration, learning not only from the past, but also from the present and looking into the future.
British Journal of Religious Education | 2011
Nadeem Memon
In the 70 year history of Islamic schools in North America, there is yet to be an accredited teacher education programme to train and professionally equip Islamic school teachers with an understanding of an Islamic pedagogy. Arguably, there has been an imbalance of energy placed on curriculum development projects over the considerations of teacher training. From my experience working as a teacher trainer/education consultant for Islamic schools for the past 10 years, it is evident that the underlying assumption for many school administrators is that a State/Ministry certified teacher who is Muslim will know how to teach ‘Islamically’. The aims of this paper are to first establish some semblance of what it means to teach Islamically or, more accurately, to teach through an Islamic pedagogy. From this framework, the crux of the paper is to present findings from a series of focus groups with Islamic school educators about their teacher training needs. The findings of this study establish the need for a formal teacher education programme in Islamic pedagogy within an established faculty of education. Such a programme would achieve three major ends in cultivating the stewardship of Islamic schools in North America: 1. Define and establish Islamic education as a valid and relevant pedagogical model that can contribute to the broader discourse of alternative, faith-based education; 2. Standardise the pedagogy and curriculum of Islamic schools based on the principles of education in Islam and to make both contextually relevant; 3. Contribute to raising the standards of Islamic schools through a teacher education programme at credible faculties of education where ongoing research and development will also be supported.
Archive | 2018
Nadeem Memon; Mariam Alhashmi
Religious traditions embody inherent pedagogical perspectives—a way of teaching religion. Among Muslim scholarship, conceptual aspects of a philosophy of education rooted in Islam have been articulated but often piecemeal, making it inaccessible to Islamic schools today. The challenge has been in synthesising philosophies of Islamic education, or better termed Islamic pedagogy, in a way that is relevant and applicable to contemporary schools. This chapter aims to establish some semblance of an Islamic pedagogical framework. The concepts and perspectives identified may serve as a rubric for Islamic schools to renew their conceptions of Islamic education for a deeper connection between religious education as a subject and pedagogy rooted in a religious tradition.
Journal of International Migration and Integration \/ Revue De L'integration Et De La Migration Internationale | 2010
Nadeem Memon
Archive | 2016
Mujadad Zaman; Nadeem Memon
British Journal of Religious Education | 2018
Nadeem Memon
Archive | 2014
Mark Evans; David Montemurro; Mira Gambhir; Kathryn Broad; George J. Sefa Dei; Jim Cummins; Kate O’Connor; Ali A. Abdi; Pamela Toulouse; Antonino Giambrone; Michelle Schweisfurth; Domenic Bellissimo; Rob Dubyk; Alison Wallace; Karen Mundy; Caroline Manion; Rosemary Evans; William Gaudelli; David Ast; Kathy Bickmore; Cathy Marks Krpan; Antoinette Gagné; Stephanie Soto Gordon; Robert Lato; Sarfaroz Niyozov; Margaret Wells; Angela Nardozi; Jean-Paul Restoule; Nancy Steele; Usha James
Archive | 2014
Graham P. McDonough; Nadeem Memon; Avi I.Mintz
Archive | 2013
Graham P. McDonough; Nadeem Memon; Avi I.Mintz