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Directives curriculaires et les attitudes de citoyenneté chez les étudiants latino-américains: une analyse comparative Année de publication: 2015 Auteur: Martín Bascopé | Macarena Bonhomme | Cristián Cox | Juan Carlos Castillo | Daniel Miranda Auteur institutionnel: Revista Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Niñez y Juventud Les directives curriculaires sont devenues progressivement pertinentes pour la formation des futurs citoyens actifs. Dans un tel contexte, il devient crucial d'explorer la relation entre les directives sur les programmes et la façon dont l'éducation à la citoyenneté est actuellement acquise par les étudiants dans les pays d'Amérique latine. Par conséquent, le but de cet article est d'évaluer comparativement la vision institutionnelle de la citoyenneté exprimée dans chaque programme et les attitudes des élèves sur les questions civiques. L'analyse factorielle exploratoire et l'analyse statistique descriptive scolaires reposent sur deux sources précieuses et complémentaires, respectivement: Le module latino-américain de l'Étude Internationale Civique et la Citoyenneté (EICC) et le Système Régional de la Citoyenneté des Compétences. En faisant une comparaison systématique des deux sources, cette étude révèle que plusieurs aspects scolaires sont compatibles avec les attitudes et les croyances de la citoyenneté des élèves, et suggère quelques lignes directrices pour l'amélioration et l'expansion de l'éducation à la citoyenneté en Amérique latine, compte tenu de l'importance de l'éducation pour la formation d'un la citoyenneté active. Securitising Education to Prevent Terrorism or Losing Direction? Année de publication: 2016 Auteur: Bill Durodie Auteur institutionnel: Society for Educational Studies | Taylor & Francis This article examines the growing relationship between security and education, particularly in the light of the UK government’s Prevent Duty that seeks to tackle radicalization in a variety of milieus, including universities. However, rather than seeing this process as being merely one-way, through a so-called securitization of education, what is explored here is the dialectic between these two spheres. It is suggested that a heightened sensitivity to the supposed consequences of inflammatory rhetoric on the well-being of supposedly suggestible or vulnerable students has been in existence within education for quite some time. Securitising Education to Prevent Terrorism or Losing Direction? Année de publication: 2016 Auteur: Bill Durodie Auteur institutionnel: Society for Educational Studies | Taylor & Francis Cet article examine le lien grandissant entre la sécurité et l'éducation, à la lumière, en particulier, du programme « Prevent Duty » du gouvernement britannique, qui vise à lutter contre la radicalisation dans différents milieux, tels que les universités. Cependant, plutôt que de voir un simple processus de sécurisation de l'éducation, il s’agit ici d’explorer la dialectique entre ces deux éléments. On pose comme hypothèse qu'une sensibilité accrue aux soi-disant conséquences d’un discours enflammé sur le bien-être des élèves prétendus influençables ou vulnérables existe au sein de l'éducation depuis un certain temps. Holocaust Education: Analysis of Curricula and Frameworks: A Case Study of Illinois This article addresses how far educational institutions have come in designing authentic and meaningful curricula for teaching the Holocaust at the secondary level. Examined in this article are the historical development of Holocaust education in the United States, with a focus on the state of Illinois as a case study, what contributes to the development of a full curriculum, and what constitutes the boundary between a curriculum and a framework, based on examination of the work of scholars and institutions in the field. Analysis of existing frameworks according to criteria developed by the authors has yielded the finding that a framework can only guide teachers to an extent because of its looser structure. A full curriculum, however, is structured with greater detail and more direct ways of determining evidence that demonstrates understanding of the content and mastery of essential skills. Recommendations are provided for Holocaust Education curriculum development, underscoring the significance of an engaging design that makes learning more lasting and meaningful. (By the author) Understanding Matters: Holocaust Curricula and the Social Studies Classroom Over the past two decades, interest in Holocaust education has grown substantially as individual states, starting in the 1980s, began to mandate and/or recommend Holocaust studies as part of the social studies curriculum. As a result, these mandates and/or interest in the Holocaust have spawned any number of curriculum products, some of which seek less to help the student of history acquire an understanding of this historical event, and more in terms of dictating to the social studies student what he or she should understand. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to critique Holocaust curricula that have been developed under the auspices of a state department of education (SDE) or endorsed by a SDE, as we believe that teachers unfamiliar with the Holocaust will turn to these products as sources of authority. We base this critique on what we refer to as three approaches or considerations to understanding history—the body of work on historical thinking which we view as the underpinning of historical empathy and positionality, historical empathy as articulated by Elizabeth Yeager, O.L. Davis, Jr., and Stuart Foster, and the guidelines on teaching the Holocaust developed for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum by William Parsons and Samuel Totten. These three elements, each in their own way, help us to understand the challenge for teachers and students whose foundation for understanding the Holocaust may solely rest upon curriculum products whose curricular aims and/or design often obstruct the quest to “understand,” e.g., lack of historical accuracy, lack of depth, and historical gaps. (By the author) Controversial Issues - Teachers' attitudes and practices in the context of citizenship education Année de publication: 2004 Auteur: Christopher Oultona | Vanessa Dayb | Justin Dillon | Marcus Graced A survey of the literature suggests that the principles and methods relating to the teaching of controversial issues are themselves controversial. This irony is more relevant to teachers now than ever before. This paper explores the issue of teachers' readiness to use controversial issues in the classroom, and reports on research involving focus groups and questionnaires. We suggest that many teachers are under‐prepared and feel constrained in their ability to handle this aspect of their work.  Controversial Issues - Teachers' attitudes and practices in the context of citizenship education Année de publication: 2004 Auteur: Christopher Oultona | Vanessa Dayb | Justin Dillon | Marcus Graced Une analyse de la littérature portant sur cette question montre que les principes et les méthodes relatifs à l'enseignement des questions controversées sont eux-mêmes controversés. Cette situation absurde concerne plus que jamais les enseignants. Cet article porte sur la formation des enseignants à l’utilisation des questions controversées dans la salle de classe, et publie les résultats de la recherche effectuée auprès des groupes cibles et par le biais de questionnaire. Il s’avère que de nombreux enseignants sont loin d’être formés et qu’ils ne sont pas prêts à gérer cet aspect de leur travail. Terrorism, Religious and Ethnic Intolerance Issues in the Syllabuses and Textbooks of Bengali and English Medium and Madrasah Education in Bangladesh an Appraisal Année de publication: 2014 Auteur: NM Sajjadul Hoque The author argues that education is a catalyst for social  change  and a powerful instrument for overcoming social and security problems. In other words, the author  believes  that  syllabuses  and  textbooks  of  both  the general  and  madrasa education streams of Bangladesh have a significant role in educating people to counter terrorism as well as religious and ethnic intolerance. This  paper  attempts, however, by  reviewing  the  current  syllabuses  and    textbooks of general and madrasa education streams, and also by assessing peoples’ opinions in Bangladesh, to know whether the syllabuses and text books are adequately addressing, or not, the issues of terrorism and religious and ethnic intolerance.  Terrorism, Religious and Ethnic Intolerance Issues in the Syllabuses and Textbooks of Bengali and English Medium and Madrasah Education in Bangladesh an Appraisal Année de publication: 2014 Auteur: NM Sajjadul Hoque L'auteur fait valoir que l'éducation est un catalyseur du changement social et un instrument puissant pour surmonter les problèmes sociaux liés à la sécurité. En d'autres termes, l'auteur estime que les programmes et les manuels scolaires de l’enseignement général et de la madrasa au Bangladesh ont un rôle important à jouer dans la lutte contre le terrorisme, l'intolérance religieuse et ethnique, à travers l'éducation. Ce document s’efforce, toutefois, d’examiner, si les programmes et les manuels abordent de manière adéquate, ou non, les questions du terrorisme et de l'intolérance religieuse et ethnique. L’auteur évalue les programmes actuels et les manuels en cours d’utilisation dans les établissements d’enseignement général et dans les madrasas, ainsi que les points de vue des Bangladeshis.  Unsafe Gods: Security, secularism and schooling Année de publication: 2014 Auteur: Lynn Davies This book makes the compelling argument that religion can be complicit in conflict and that a new secularism is vital to foster security. Using insights from complexity science, it shows how dynamic secularism can be used to accommodate diverse faiths and beliefs within worldly politics. Exploration of the interplay of religion and education in the context of security and notions of safe schools offers new understandings of how religions learn – or instead remain frozen accidents that hinder societies from adapting to change. The book shows how turbulence and amplification underscore the necessity for an education that is critical even of patriarchal religious texts and that recognizes the power of satire and humour.