Asset-Based Civics for, With, and by Immigrant Students: Three Sites of Enriched Teaching and Learning for Immigrant and Native-Born Students
In: Theory and research in social education, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 372-404
ISSN: 2163-1654
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In: Theory and research in social education, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 372-404
ISSN: 2163-1654
In: The Journal of Social Studies Research: JSSR, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 209-222
ISSN: 0885-985X
The primary objective of this article is to detail how two teachers in the same school site, in the American Southeast, taught war to the children of soldiers. Taken from an extensive qualitative case study involving eight teachers, this article examines the pedagogies engaged in by two teachers who expressed a desire to teach war more critically to their students. Critically here means but is not exclusive to raising student consciousness to issues of war not typically taught including investigating how power, race, gender, and sex operate in war, more closely examining decisions evaluating them for their justness or unjustness. In short a more authentic exploration of war. One teacher engaged a pedagogy of tension the other a pedagogy of facts. Both resulted in a less than critical examination of war. A pedagogy of tension reflected this teacher's reaction to pressure from the community and fear of surfacing or inflicting trauma upon students. A pedagogy of facts reflected the second teachers' beliefs that focusing teaching on facts will allow her to teach a more critical rendition of war. A qualitative empirical study, data was collected through interview and classroom observation.
In: The Journal of Social Studies Research: JSSR, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 130-149
ISSN: 0885-985X
The primary objective of this article is to describe how the children of soldiers critiqued and examined media representations of war. Taken from a more extensive qualitative case study involving eight teachers, this article examines one social studies teacher and her students' perspectives on media coverage of war through two Socratic Seminar discussions focused on two wars: the American Civil War and Gulf War. Data was collected through interviews, focus groups, and classroom observations. Students leveled a specific set of critiques at television media and those who consume it. They also grappled with two ethical quandaries: censorship and the justness of war. This article emerged from an unusual place – a Mathew Brady photograph. The teacher, a lecturer typically, decided to engage her students in discussion. This discussion was designed to provide "process and sense-making time," according to their teacher, Ms. Jones, after four days of lecture on the American Civil War. Yet, the discussion grew into something much different than Ms. Jones's original plan. It evolved into an interrogation of how the media represents war. Inspired by the thoughtful discussion, several months later, Ms. Jones engaged the same students in an examination of media representations of the first Gulf War. Ms. Jones is the focus of this article because out of the eight other teachers in the larger qualitative study, she was the only one to focus on classroom time (two entire class sessions) on media representations of war.
In: Social studies research and practice, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 78-88
ISSN: 1933-5415
We present an instructional strategy called Challenging Constitutional Rights, in which high school civics students critically interacted with, and interpreted, constitutional rights. As an alternative assessment project, students used technologies to make visual and oral presentations on the relationship between a current event and a right detailed in an amendment to the U.S. constitution. In this article, we describe the process of the project, detail the strengths of the project organized around the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) Vision of powerful teaching and learning, and conclude with reflections from the teacher who designed and implemented this project. Exemplars of student work are included.
In: Citizenship, character and values education 1
In: Theory and research in social education, Band 52, Heft 2, S. 212-244
ISSN: 2163-1654
In: The Journal of Social Studies Research: JSSR, Band 39, Heft 2, S. 107-118
ISSN: 0885-985X
This qualitative case study draws on interview and focus group data from six Civics teachers. As global education scholars assert, local, national, and global "levels of citizenship" do not occur in a vacuum, instead, each level is invariably connected to one another. Teachers in this study, however, placed different priorities on the levels – prioritizing the national, minimizing the local, and marginalizing the global. Participants also used different teaching strategies in order to teach the different levels: emphasizing knowledge acquisition and values transmission at the national level and more active civic behaviors at the local level.
In: Theory and research in social education, Band 40, Heft 1, S. 35-65
ISSN: 2163-1654
In: The Journal of Social Studies Research: JSSR, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 237-248
ISSN: 0885-985X
In this study, preservice teachers viewed clips from three documentary films that presented multiple experiences of contemporary immigrants and refugees. Our focus in the study was how preservice teachers analyzed the three films. Specifically, we examined how elementary, middle grades, and secondary preservice teachers analyzed, both from a cognitive and affective stance, clips of documentary films about the difficult topic of contemporary immigration.
In: The Journal of Social Studies Research: JSSR, Band 44, Heft 4, S. 367-381
ISSN: 0885-985X
This case study describes the design, learning experiences, and student outcomes in one Instructional Design course with an explicit focus on globally competent teaching. We make the argument that forefronting global competence in an Instructional Design course, prior to social studies methods, is a necessary precursor to accelerate students' progress on a pathway towards teaching for global competence. In support of this argument, we (a) describe the ways in which an Instructional Design course in one university forefronted global competence; (b) explain the short- and long-term outcomes of this design; and (c) highlight four students to illustrate how the Instructional Design course helped to move students along a pathway towards global competence. We nest our approach within a globally competent teaching framework.
In: Social studies: a periodical for teachers and administrators, Band 114, Heft 4, S. 160-172
ISSN: 2152-405X
This practitioner perspective describes a collaboration between students and teachers at three middle schools, along with community partners, to recover and digitize news stories from The Daily Record, an African American owned newspaper that was attacked and burned in the 1898 Wilmington coup d'état.
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In: Social studies research and practice, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 41-64
ISSN: 1933-5415
We explored social studies teachers' dispositions towards working with immigrant students in an Atlantic new gateway state. We surveyed 99 middle and high school social studies teachers using the additive versus subtractive models as a theoretical framework. Although teachers' professional backgrounds and school contexts were connected to teaching inclusively, their academic expectations of immigrant students, their beliefs on assimilation (regarding schools' and teachers' roles in maintaining heritage cultures and languages), and their opinions on the effective implementation of school policies concerning immigrant students' learning were significant contributors to teaching inclusiveness.