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Rapid economic, social, political and technological changes in the external environments of systems put constant pressure on the internal processes and practices of educational. Over the last four decades educational systems have become more and more vulnerable to economic, political and social developments. Recent global developments such as the in the Arab world and their impact on the refugee crisis; the Brexit crisis; and the introduction of Mercantile law by the US impacting China and the movement of goods around the are some of the major political developments causing turbulence Taysum and Arar (2018). The impact of crises and the chaos they create has direct and indirect repercussions for (Arar; Brooks & Bogotch, 2019). Although these political, economic and social disruptions look quite regional, the growing interconnectedness of the world carries the impact of developments to the global setting at a very fast pace. More importantly these disruptions constant pressure on education systems to change their governance systems, their administrative structures, and their management and curricular dimensions. In general, the field of education has been experiencing this era of change in a unique way. Key research trends in education such as school effectiveness, school improvement and equity (or social justice) have demanding more specific reactions from education systems to the trends and developments around the world. Technology integration, curriculum adaptations, structural changes new approaches to developing teachers are some of the common forms of change enforced governments on different education systems.
Arar et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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