The Shine and Shadow of Global Citizenship: Insights from Teacher Education in Remote Indigenous Communities in Australia

Author(s):  
Julie Dyer ◽  
Catherine Hartung
2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-145
Author(s):  
Fern Snart

Within current Canadian learning environments, learners bring sophistication in areas such as communication/technology, a wide diversity of learning needs, and often an orientation towards social justice. This commentary refers to the ongoing responsiveness of teacher education programs to these evolving learner attributes, using as exemplars the areas of global citizenship education and technology integration. A backdrop for this discussion is the observation that the knowledge and skills that contribute to successful adult lives are also evolving.


Author(s):  
Alfredo Gomes Dias ◽  
Antonio Ernesto Gómez Rodríguez ◽  
Antoni Santisteban ◽  
Joan Pagès Blanch

Author(s):  
Kevin O'Connor ◽  
Gladys Sterenberg ◽  
Norman Vaughan

This chapter investigates how teacher candidates' experiences in STEAM field studies with community partners can inform work in teacher education within an integrated practicum based on curriculum of place. The overall goal of the inquiry is to better understand and articulate the particular ways in which people value place-based knowledge. Through relationships with Indigenous communities, the team of educators has a deeply held conviction that sustained deliberations on the connections between Indigenous knowledge systems and place-based thinking can provide significant opportunities for reframing education. Learning from place emphasizes a relationship with the land, something deeply respected in Indigenous communities and something absent from much of place-based education. The research explores this tension as we come to a deeper and shared understanding of co-responsibility within Treaty 7 relationships. The project seeks to close this gap by considering varying perspectives of place as it informs STEAM teacher education pedagogy.


Author(s):  
Celia Haig-Brown ◽  
Te Kawehau Hoskins

Indigenous teacher education has proven to be a powerful influence in the resurgence of Indigenous cultures and languages globally. In Canada and Aotearoa New Zealand, while there are numerous distinctions between the countries in size, linguistic and cultural diversity, and the histories of Indigenous peoples and colonization, an Indigenous commitment to schooling has shaped long-term and recent aspirations in both contexts. Within Canada, the proliferation of Indigenous teacher education programs is a direct result of a 1972 landmark national policy document Indian Control of Indian Education. This document written by Indigenous leaders in response to the Canadian government was the culmination of a decades-long, relentless commitment to creating the best possible schooling systems for Indigenous students within the provinces and territories. In 2015, despite some significant gains, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada completed its work articulating Calls to Action that reinforce the original recommendations, particularly the focus on Indigenous control of education. In the Aotearoa New Zealand context, the establishment of Māori language schooling pathways and Māori medium teacher education programs has been made possible by activism focused on the recognition of Indigenous-Māori rights to language and culture guaranteed by the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi. Forms of constitutional recognition of the Treaty of Waitangi mean that New Zealand endorses a social policy of biculturalism. From the 1970s and 1980s, responses to exclusionary and racist colonial policies and practices have led to the creation of teacher education programs in both Canada and Aotearoa New Zealand transforming universities and schools and establishing spaces of Indigenous authority, activism and expertise. While the pace of change varies radically from place to place and from institution to institution, and the specific contexts of the two countries differ in important ways, the innumerable Indigenous graduates of the programs make ongoing contributions to Indigenizing, decolonizing, and educating Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities alike. The growth and strengthening of an Indigenous education sector have led to significant policy and curriculum reforms across the education systems and to ongoing engagement in critique, advocacy, research, and practice. Throughout their development, Indigenous leadership and control of the programs remain the immediate and long-range goals.


2013 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debbie Bradbery

AbstractDeveloping an understanding of the importance of a sustainable future is vital in helping children to become ‘global citizens’. Global citizens are those willing to take responsibility for their own actions, respect and value diversity and see themselves as contributors to a more peaceful and sustainable world. Children's literature — picture and story books in particular — can be used as a powerful tool to help even the youngest citizens become aware of the need to assume responsibility for creating and enjoying a sustainable future through global citizenship. Children's literature can be utilised to help children examine and change personal lifestyles to secure a sustainable future; to identify, investigate, evaluate and undertake appropriate action to maintain, protect and enhance local and global environments; to challenge preconceived ideas, accept change and acknowledge uncertainty and to work cooperatively and in partnerships with others. This article explores and examines ways in which some examples of Australasian children's literature, specifically Storm Boy (Thiele, 1963), Lester and Clyde (Reece, 1991), The Waterhole (Base, 2001), Window (Baker, 1991) and Belonging (Baker, 2004), have been used in a literacy focused preservice teacher education course to assist preservice teachers entering their internship school placements to develop children's understandings of an ecologically sustainable future. It provides further insight into methods for embedding teaching for a sustainable future into pre-service teacher education.


Author(s):  
Jordi Castellví Mata

El concepto de educación para la ciudadanía es tremendamente complejo, más si le añadimos el término ‘global’. Por este motivo, hablar de educación para la ciudadanía global (ECG) no basta para para situar al lector -ya sea estudiante, docente o académico- puesto que hay múltiples ideas e interpretaciones de lo que EGC significa. Las personas y los estados lo interpretan o lo enfocan de formas diferentes, ya sea por motivos epistemológicos, históricos, culturales, ideológicos o económicos. El libro reseñado aborda esta complejidad des de la perspectiva de la formación del profesorado, un debate que se hace necesario en los procesos de transformación educativa y social, puesto que sabemos que los cambios suelen darse a través de la formación inicial, en un proceso lento pero que puede conseguir resultados que realmente supongan un avance cultural y educativo significativo. El libro se estructura en forma de manual y, aunque sus editores son los profesores Schugurensky y Wolhunter de la Arizona State University (USA) y de la Noth-West University (Sudáfrica) respectivamente, este está escrito en colaboración con más de treinta académicos de catorce países distintos. En este sentido, el manual tiene por objetivo intentar explicar a qué se refiere el mundo cuando habla de ECG en la formación del profesorado, teniendo en cuenta múltiples ideas y puntos de vista. Se estructura en catorce capítulos de los cuales la primera mitad (capítulos 1 – 6) tienen un enfoque más teórico mientras que la segunda mitad (capítulos 7 – 14) tienen un enfoque más práctico, sin dejar de ser ensayos sobre el estado de la cuestión de la ECG en la formación de maestros.


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