الموارد
استكشف مجموعة واسعة من الموارد القيمة حول تعليم المواطنة العالمية لتعميق فهمك وتعزيز البحث والمناصرة والتعليم والتعلم.
تم العثور على 26 نتيجة
Interrupting Extremism by Creating Educative Turbulence سنة النشر: 2014 المؤلف: Lynn Davies المؤلف المؤسسي: Curriculum Inquiry This article begins from the premise that it is important to explore how people unlearn, as well as learn, specifically in terms of extremist or violent attitudes. Three different country examples are given of intergroup encounters that interrupt rigidities in attitudes: working across ethnic groups in Sri Lanka, tackling religious divides in Northern Ireland through shared classes, and initiatives to prevent violent extremism in the United Kingdom. Pedagogical implications of unlearning involve working with the four Ds of deradicalization, debiasing, disengagement and desistence.
Interrupting Extremism by Creating Educative Turbulence سنة النشر: 2014 المؤلف: Lynn Davies المؤلف المؤسسي: Curriculum Inquiry Cet article développe l'idée qu'il est important d'analyser les processus de désapprentissage, autant que d'apprentissage, qui conduisent un individu à adopter des attitudes extrémistes ou violentes. Des exemples tirés de trois pays sont mobilisés pour montrer comment des rencontres intergroupes conduisent à infléchir des comportements rigides : le travail entre groupes ethniques au Sri Lanka, la lutte contre les divisions religieuses en Irlande du Nord à l'aide de classes mixtes, et des initiatives visant à prévenir l'extrémisme violent au Royaume-Uni. Les implications pédagogiques d'une approche par le "désapprentissage" nécessitent de mobiliser les quatre "D": déradicalisation, désubjectivation, désengagement et désistance.
Assurer à tous une éducation équitable, inclusive et de qualité: Objectif de développement durable 4 au Canada سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف المؤسسي: Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC) Ce rapport fournit un cadre pour communiquer l’information aux échelons pancanadien et international au sujet du travail en cours au Canada sur la réalisation de l’ODD 4. Il tire parti des données et des indicateurs liés à l’ODD 4 et inclut, dans la mesure du possible, les données provinciales et territoriales.
The Impact of Short-term Study Abroad on Global Citizenship Identity and Engagement (Journal of Global Citizenship & Equity Education; Vol. 7, No. 1) سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف: Paul Sherman | Brianna Cofield | Neve Connolly المؤلف المؤسسي: Centennial College Higher education has increasingly realized the importance of engaging students in global citizenship learning opportunities to be more globally informed, prepared, responsible, and competent. Study abroad in higher education is rapidly becoming recognized as an effective experiential learning platform for fostering intercultural exchanges. This article reports on research that examined study abroad as a learning platform for integrating classroom-acquired knowledge with real-world experience. The study explored the value of short-term study abroad in the facilitation of students’ global awareness and knowledge, their identification as global citizens and endorsement of prosocial values associated with global citizenship, and their participation as globally engaged citizens. Participation in study abroad was found to significantly strengthen one’s affiliation with global citizenship, endorsement of prosocial values and motivation to engage in global citizenship activities. Our findings have implications for the design and implementation of global citizenship education curricula in higher education.
Ensuring Inclusive and Equitable Quality Education: Sustainable Development Goal 4 in Canada سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف المؤسسي: Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC) This report provides a framework to share information at the pan-Canadian and international levels on work underway in Canada to achieve SDG 4. The report builds on SDG 4 data and indicators and includes, where possible, provincial and territorial data.
The Role of English in Global Citizenship (Journal of Global Citizenship & Equity Education; Vol. 7, No. 1) سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف: Claire Cavanagh المؤلف المؤسسي: Centennial College Despite scholars’ attempts to define and conceptualise global citizenship, the literature tends to ignore the role of English as the global lingua franca. In this paper, the author argues that ignoring English as the global lingua franca is a gross oversight, particularly in internationalised higher education where global citizenship is often presented as an aspiration for students. Websites of two South Korean universities were analysed regarding how the respective institutions intend to develop global citizens. Twenty students enrolled in the universities participated in interviews regarding their conceptualizations of global citizenship and how they frame their relationship with global and Korean identities. The findings reveal that global citizenship is generally conceived in terms of English with a strong adherence to fluency norms and in opposition to Korean identity. This influences how the students position themselves in relation to a global community and affects their conception of national identities. The paper ends with both theoretical and practical recommendations regarding the role of English in global citizenship.
From Rhetoric to Reality: Identifying Teacher Opportunities and Barriers in Educating for Human Rights (Journal of Global Citizenship & Equity Education; Vol. 7, No. 1) سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف: Wanda Cassidy | Özlem Sensoy | Kumari Beck المؤلف المؤسسي: Centennial College In this paper we report findings from a four-year study into legal literacy that examined educational opportunities and barriers when teaching about legal literacy, citizenship education, and human rights education. Detailed findings are drawn from interviews with eleven teachers who self-identify as valuing and embedding legal literacy and related themes (human rights, identity, citizenship, and ecological sustainability) in their classrooms. Results show that despite deep rhetorical commitments to human rights education, teachers are stymied by perceived barriers to implementing HRE, particularly the action dimension. We name these perceived barriers and examine the case of one of the teachers who seemingly has overcome them, in order to identify potential constructive interventions in teacher education.
Global Citizenship Education Starts With Curricular Reform and Active Student Learning (Journal of Global Citizenship & Equity Education; Vol. 7, No. 1) سنة النشر: 2020 المؤلف: Evan Saperstein المؤلف المؤسسي: Centennial College In this new age of globalization, the concept of global citizenship has taken root and become the subject of increasing scholarly attention and analysis. While the study of global citizenship has become part of high school curricula in several countries across the globe, it has not to the same degree in the United States. To expand upon the existing literature and advance the study of global citizenship in the United States, this qualitative, interpretivist case study evaluates the perceptions and experiences of an administrator, two teachers, and six students of a global studies course at an urban high school in New Jersey. The study included interviews of the participants, as well as analysis of the course curriculum, syllabus, and student assignments.This study advances three primary findings. First, the need for continued curriculum development and design of global studies related courses and content in U.S. high schools. Second, the importance of experiential learning, among other forms of pedagogy and instructional practices, in furthering the goals of global citizenship education. Third, the need for class projects, international education programs, and other experiential learning opportunities (such as fieldwork, service-learning, or community programs) to cultivate student interest in global citizenship. Based on these findings and the prevailing literature, this study is proposing that U.S. high schools offer an elective course on global citizenship with ten units: 1) Introduction to Global Citizenship; 2) Sustainable Development; 3) Poverty and World Hunger; 4) Global Health Issues; 5) Child Mortality; 6) Peace and Conflict; 7) Human Rights and Gender Equality; 8) Universal Education; 9) Liberal Democratic Governance and Rights; 10) Global Citizenship Action Plan.
Educating for global citizenship: an ETFO curriculum development inquiry initiative سنة النشر: 2010 المؤلف: Alice Assor-Chandler | Mali Bickley | Jim Carleton | Antonino Giambrone | Janice Gregg | Jennifer Hunter | Laura Inglis | Leigh-Anne Ingram | Angela MacDonald | Miyuki (Erica) Moizumi | Carol Peterson | Carrie Schoemer | Nadya Weber | Tonia Wojciechowski المؤلف المؤسسي: Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario (ETFO) Attention to educating for citizenship continues to expand and deepen worldwide. Many countries now include citizenship education as an important feature of their official curriculum, albeit in variant forms. Numerous research studies, policy reforms, and curriculum initiatives have been undertaken, as teachers, policy makers and researchers attempt to understand the intricate processes by which young people learn about democratic citizenship, and where and how citizenship education should be located and represented in school curricula.Educating for global citizenship has been a critical dimension of these discussions and investigations. Recent shifts in the speed and global reach of information and communication technologies, an increasingly interdependent global economy, challenges in human rights and social justice, and the impact of international tragedies and emergencies have, for example, created tensions and conditions that require more integrated, worldwide responses. Not surprisingly, understandings of global citizenship are being explored with increased intensity and, as might be expected, there has been a corresponding – and growing - interest among educators in various parts of the world to strengthen the global dimension of citizenship education in school curricula at all levels.In Canada, there has been increasing attention to what it means to educate for the global citizenship and provincial curriculum policy developments in recent years. A host of useful ideas in the form of new resource materials and websites to inform and guide teachers’ work have also emerged. The Canadian International Development Agency’s (CIDA) in the global classroom initiative, Classroom Connections’ Cultivating Peace in the 21st Century and Taking Action, Larsen’s ACT! Active Citizens Today: Global Citizenship for Local Schools, and UNICEF Canada’s Global Schoolhouse are a few examples of the many resources that have recently been developed. Despite this growing interest, there has been less attention devoted to examining practices of global citizenship education within Canadian classrooms, leaving a limited understanding of how it is applied in schools.A wide range of perspectives and practices has emerged, reflecting a considerable growth of interest in this dimension of education. In an effort to clarify the multiple dimensions of global citizenship education, below are two “working” frameworks that provide an overview of core learning goals and key teaching and learning practices associated with global citizenship education from the literature. They reveal both complexity and multidimensionality and provide a lens to analyse and reflect upon the breadth and depth of what it means to educate for global dimension of citizenship. 