The ¹ú²úÂÒÂ× Education eBooks collection comprises a wide range of authoritative monographs, textbooks, and reference works and has won numerous awards such as the Society of Professors of Education Book Award, the Society for Educational Studies Book Prize and the Critics’ Choice Book.
We spoke with Nick Melchior, Editorial Director for Springer’s Social Science and Education books program about highlights of the collection and how the program has developed.
I joined Springer in 2013 as a Senior Editor, after working for a number of publishing companies in both books and journals focused roles. As I started in education research publishing, my wife was also studying to be a teacher so I learned a lot from her over the years.
There’s a few things about ¹ú²úÂÒÂ×’s eBook collection which are really important. First of all, my team and I are responsible for the Springer part of the collection’s offering but there’s a really significant part of the collection that comes from my colleagues at Palgrave as well. On the Springer side, the origins of the program were in mathematics and science education but over the last decade we’ve massively expanded the coverage of the program into areas like early childhood education, educational psychology and language education, just to name a few. We’ve kept that core STEM focus strong as well, expanding into technology education with series like . Another strength is the geographic breadth of our author base. We have editors in the Netherlands, China Singapore, Australia and the US working on books for the education package. We have truly international coverage.
My colleagues in Palgrave have a comprehensive, innovative, and award-winning global approach to areas like sociology of education, alternative education, and adult education/lifelong learning. The imprints have really complimentary coverage in subjects like higher education, history of education, international and comparative education and education policy.
Finally, we have a rigorous approach to peer review to help ensure that the books we publish in the package are of the highest quality.
Everyone is working to reach these goals and of course we focus a lot on SDG4 and inclusive education but we also have deep links to SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities) and Palgrave in particular links to SDG 5 (Gender Equality). We have increasing amounts of content that looks at environmental issues within education (such as Springer’s and Palgrave’s series) and meeting the challenge of inequality in education (such as the Springer ) and we are also feeding books into the Springer Sustainable Development Goals Book Series.
I think that our flagship series has to be the which is now up to nearly 50 titles. Alongside some of the Encyclopaedias we’ve also published such as the , they are the heart of our collection. From these handbooks, we’ve developed a lot of the rest of our publishing program, including other series. In terms of textbooks, we started a real push for these only a few years back. We now have a flourishing series in . It was founded in 2016 and now is coming up to its 30th book. It covers some more professional topics and some core subjects so it should have something for everyone!
Palgrave’s textbook program is getting started now as well with key titles such as and they have an extensive Handbook collection such as and .
We started with a mathematics and science education focus and have over the years expanded a huge amount so we now cover educational philosophy, early childhood education, social justice in education, digital and technology education, educational policy and politics and many others. In terms of geography, we made a concerted push in to Asia-Pacific nearly 10 years ago and now have editors in Singapore and China, with me in Melbourne.
Palgrave have been continuing with a strong focus on titles with a social justice intersection and/or decolonizing perspectives and growing in developing areas such as autoethnography and digital education. They’re also seeing a lot more titles from the Latin America and the Caribbean region with a growing author base and a forthcoming series called Education in Latin America and the Caribbean.
I think people are increasingly international in their focus – more collaborative and outward looking – and that’s great news. We try to be broad in our coverage so we have some very hard-nosed quantitative research and then some much more philosophical work as well. So across the breadth of the program, we see all sorts of things. I think, if anything, the research has moved away from the sort of data-focused work we saw in vogue in the last decade but of course that’s still there and still crucial.
Covid-19 has been an opportunity for people to get to that proposal that they had sitting not quite finished but most of the work hasn’t been Covid-related as such. We’ve had a number of Education in the post-Covid world type proposals which, frankly, seem a little speculative to me. Some of those have been good, some less so and so we need to be focused on making sure the quality is there. A lot of people are also looking at books on distance and remote learning and trying to bring that research out to a wider audience now that it’s a mainstream topic! I think that we’ll see the really good research come out in 2021-22 when we have a better idea of what the lessons of C19 are.
Yes, we have some excellent work in vocational education and training – especially work from the and book series, as well as handbooks like 2019’s . Palgrave titles in the area include . Covid-19 is going to force people of all-ages back to retraining in a way we haven’t seen for years as unemployment and recession bite. VET research is going to be more important than ever while we try to negotiate these changes.
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