Talking
About Pedagogy: Classroom Discourse and Citizenship Education (David
L. Grossman – East West Center, Manoa-Honolulu)
As
outlined the introduction, this book has sought to find out what
citizenship education looks like in classrooms across Asia and how it
is (or is not) facilitated by pedagogy. The case studies of
citizenship education pedagogy in Asia-Pacific societies have the
potential to contribute to an understanding of geographical and
cultural variations in the preparation of future citizens at
classrooms level.
These case studies are firmly embedded in broader
social and political contexts and it is clear not all of these can be
considered “democratic.” The political contexts represented have
reflect a continuum that includes mature democracies such as the
Unites States Australia and New Zealand, democracies that have been
labeled as “soft authoritarian” such as Singapore, post-World War
II democracies such as Japan and Taiwan, non democratic countries
such China, including Hong Kong and a country like Pakistan that has
democratic institutions that in recent times have been severely
tested in recent times by military dictatorship and theocratic
commitments The presence of cases studies involving quasi-democratic
or non democratic political systems is a reality in the region and
their inclusion here does not represent an endorsement of these
politics. It does mean, however, that we have allowed for the
possibility of citizenship education in a non democratic or
quasi-democratic context. Looking at the cases of citizenship
education pedagogy across a spectrum of regimes serves the editors'
long-range agenda of increased study and dialogue across traditional
political and cultural boundaries.
The
focus of this chapter, however, is focused on pedagogies hat will
best facilitate democratic citizenship education. As pointed out in
the introduction, this book started from the premise that pedagogies
take a variety of forms, have multiple purposes, and very often,
uncertain comes. School curricula subsume different types of learning
that call for somewhat different types of teaching. In this view no
single teaching method should be the choice for all learning
occasions: “An optimal program will feature a mixture of
instructional methods and learning activities” (Brophy, 2001, pp.
5-6)
What
are the elements of an optimal program for democratic citizenship
education? Can good teaching contribute to the education of
democratic citizens? If so, what is good teaching? There is a
considerable body of research literature, particularly in Western
societies, that seeks to identify generic models of effective
pedagogy. The American Psychological Association (APA), for example,
has derived a set of learner-centered principles derived from more
than a century of research on teaching and learning. There are 14
principles in all, divided among four categories: cognitive and
metacognitive, motivational and affective, developmental and social,
and individual differences. APA claims these principles are intended
to apply to all learners: “from children,, to teachers, to
administrators, to parents, and to community members involved in our
educational system” 9American Psychological Association, 1997).
How
universal these principles actually are is yet to be established by a
comparable body of research outside the West. In fact, most examples
of research on classroom pedagogy are based on studies in Western
societies. Brophy's (1999) statement that most research on teaching
has been conducted in the United States, Canada, Western Europe and
Australia is still largely true today. While acknowledging this
situation, Brophy goes on to argue that because schooling is now much
more similar than different across countries and cultures, we can try
to identify some generic principles that underlie effective teaching
and learning. Based on this assumption, Brophy described 12 generic
principles of effective teaching derived from a synthesis of research
in classrooms:
- A supportive classroom climate: student learn best within cohesive and caring learning communities
- Opportunity to learn: students learn more when most the available time is allocated to curriculum-related activities and the classroom management system emphasizes maintaining their engagement in those activities
- Curriculum alignment: All components of the curriculum are aligned to create a cohesive programme for accomplishing instructional purposes and goals
- Establish learning orientations: Teachers can prepare students for learning by providing an initial structure to clarify intended outcomes and cue desire learning strategies
- Coherent content: to facilitate meaningful learning and retention, content is explained clearly and developed with emphasis on its structure and connections
- Thoughtful discourse: questions are planned to engage students in sustained discourse structured around powerful ideas (emphasis mine)
- practice and application activities: students need sufficient opportunities to practice and apply what they are learning and to receive improvement-oriented feedback
- Scaffolding students task engagement: the teacher provides whatever assistance students need to enable them to engage in learning activities productively
- Strategy teaching: the teacher models and instructs students in learning self regulation strategies
- Co-operative learning: students often benefit from working in pairs or small groups to construct understanding or help one another master skills
- Goal-oriented assesment: the teacher uses a variety of formal and informal assesment methods to monitor progress towards learning goals
- Achievement expectations: the teacher establishes and folows through on appropriate expectations for learning outcomes (Brophy, 1999)
These
generic principles comprise a research-based tool that can provide an
analytic framework for both understanding and improving pedagogy. To
what extent, for example, are these elements are present in the case
studies in this volume? In the context of citizenship education, it
would be hard to argue againts any of these principles, either
individually or holistically, especially if it is accepted that
effective pedagogy is a necessary conditions for enhanced learning.
Even
if one accepts this generic principle of inquiry and discourse,
howver, Brophy (2001) has explained that these principles need to be
adapted to the local context, including the characteristics of the
nation's school system and the students, culture. Moreover, these
genric principles need to be supplemented with principles that
address particular school subjects and content. In fact, ultimately
what may be required is investigation of classroom pedagogy that
addresses specific curriculum strands within subjects. This is the
challenge for citizenship educators.
In
this chapter I will focus on and make an argument for the centrality
of thoughtful classroom discourse for effective democratic
citizenship education. Research findings indicate that effective
teachers structure a great deal of content-based discourse (Brophy,
2001, p13). They use questions to stimulate students to process and
reflect on the content:
Thoughtful discourse features sustained examination of a small number
of related topics, in which students are invited to develop
explanations, make predictions, debate alternative approaches to
problems, or otherwise consider the content's implications or
applications. The teacher presses student to clarify or justify their
assertions, rather than accpeting them indisciminately.
This
emphasis on inquiry and discourse is consistent with and supported
within the APA framework
of
learning principles. According to the APA (1997,p.3):
Learning can be enhanced when the learner has an opportunity to
interact and to collaborate with others on instructional tasks.
Learning settings that allow for social interactions, and that
respect diversity, encourage flexible thinking and social competence.
In interactive and collaborative instructional contexts, individuals
have an opportunity for perspective taking and reflective thinking
that may lead to higher levels of cognitive, social, and moral
development, as well as self-esteem.
To
what extent does the generic principle of thoughtful discourse apply
specifically to citizenship education? Torney Purta, Hahn, and Amadeo
(2001) surveyed the reseacrh on instructional methods and learning
activities related to effective instruction in education for
citizenship. Among their findings, they reported that the large
majority of the research they reviewed supported the value of
Brophy's sixth principle, “thoughtful discourse.” One of their
conclusions was that (Torney-Purta, Hahn, & Amadeo, 2001, p. 395)
In the area of citizenship education there is a particular value
placed on inquiry and discourse about political issues on which there
are differing opinions. To engage citizens in authentic use of
knowledge and to help them develop needed skills and attitudes for
participatory citizenship, classes should implement issues-centered
instruction.
This
emphasis on inquiry, discourse, and engagement is also supported by a
systematic review that focused on the relationship between
citizenship education and achievement. (Deakin Crick, Coates, Taylor,
& Ritchie, 2004). Based on this review Deakin Crick (2008, p. 43)
reported that the following learning processes were found to make a
significant contribution to cognitive learning outcomes:
- Engagement
- Promoting discussion
- Learner-centred teaching
- Meaningful curricula
- Developing personally
In
this chapter, therefore, I want to argue that the principle of
thoughtful discourse has to be the central (though not the
exclusive) feature of democratic citizenship education. It is
arguably reductionist to focus on only one of Brophy's 12 teaching
principles for the purposes of describing and defining effective
citizenship education. Later in this volume (chapter 13) for example,
Hahn makes the case that political discourse neds to be supported by
an open and supportive classroom climate (Brophy's Principle #1), and
certainly political discourse implies students have the opportunity
for engagement in learning (Brophy's Principle #2). Still, it is my
argument here that for effective citizenship education in a
democracy, thoughtful discourse is the fundamental building block.
For students to become good citizens in a democratic context, they
need to learn how to engage in political discourse, i.e., collective
dicision making about community and social issues (Johnson and
Johnson, 2009). For democracies to thrive, citizens have to be taught
to be democrats. Student need to have the ability to make a reasoned
argument, as well as to co-operate with others, to appreciate their
perspectives and experiences and to tolerate other points of view. In
other words, “Talk is fundamental to active citizenship” (Enslin,
Pendlebury, & Tjiattis, 2001)
Accepting
the central role od discourse in citizenship educationis similar to
Alexander's (2006, p.3) idea of the “dialogic imperative” of
citizenship education:
...there is growing recognition that dialogic forms of pedagogy are
potent tools for securing student engagement, learning and
understanding. Squaring the circle, dialogue can empower both the
lifelong learner and the future citizen – to whom the debates about
education and pedagogy properly belong (Alexander, 2006, p.3).
According
to Alexander (2005a), we now know that children need to talk, to
experience a rich diet of spoken languange, in order to think and to
learn. As Johnson and Johnson (2009) argued, the methods we use to
teach leave an imprint on students. If instructors primarily use
recitation, students are imprinted with pattern of listening, waiting
to be called upon and giving answers that the instructor wants.
However, if instructors use group discussion, students are imprinted
with a pattern of active participation, the exchange of ideas, and
consideration of others opinions. While literacy and numeracy may be
considered the basics of schooling, talk is arguably the true
foundation of learning (Alexander, 2005, p.9), and by extension the
true foundation of democratic citizenship education.
This
attention to talk/discussion/discourse as a learning tool has been
given added weight by recent work in the field of cognitive science
and the development of the concept of “distributed cognition.”
According to Hutchins (2000), while sociologiest have long noted that
most of our knowledge is the result of a social construction rather
than of individual observation (e.g., Berger & Luckmann, 1967),
it was not until the insights of the psychologists Vygotsky emerged
in the 1980s that a similar notion emerged in cognitive psychology
under the name of “distributed cognition.” traditionally human
cognition had been seen and studied as existingly solely “inside”
a person, irrelevant to the social, physical and material context in
which the cognition takes place. In contrast, Vygotsky argued that
the true direction of thinking is from the social to the individual
and not from the individual to the social.
Building
on this and similar ideas, advocates of distributed cognition argue
that a better understanding of human cognition can be achieved if it
is conceptualized and studied as distributed among individuals.
According to this concetualization, knowledge is socially constructed
through collaborative efforts toward shared objectiveswithin cultural
surroundings, and that information is processed among individuals and
the tools and artifacts provided by culture. Cognitive distribution
thus emphasizes the social aspects of cognition: “It does not seem
possible to account for the cognitive accomplishment of our species
by reference to what is inside our heads alone. One must also
consider the cognitive roles of the social and material world”
(Hutchins, 2000, p.9).
According
to Hutchins (2000), cognitive processes may be distributed in at
least three interesting ways: across members of a social group,
between internal and external structures (material or environmental),
or between earlier or later events. In the context of this chapter we
focus on the fact that classroom discussion in turn can be seen as
conversations (distributions) across members of these social groups.
According to Heylighen, Heat, and Van Overwalle (2004), “groups
often can be more intelligent than individuals, integrating
information from a variety of sources, and overcoming the individual
biases, errors and limitations.” in the simplest case, this occurs
through the accumulation of layers of individual contributions.
Heylighen, Heat, and Van Overwalle further elaborate that an idea
that is recurrently communicated will undergo a shift in meaning each
time it is assimilated by a new agent, who adds his/her own, unique
interpretation and experience to it. After several exchanges among a
diverse group of agents, the communication may result in a new
configuration of ideas or possibly a consensus around a shared
concept, thus providing a basic mechanism for the social construction
of knowledge.
The
emergence of this conceptual framework of distributed cognition
offers a powerful argument for the use of classroom discussion as one
(but not the sole) tool for learning. According to Brown, Ash,
Rutherford, Nagakawa, Gordon, and Campione (1993),, a
cognitively-based model of instruction emphasizing
socially-distributed expertise in the classroom will foster a
community of learners where the ethos is one of individual
responsibility coupled with communal sharing. In this model
discourse, constructive, discussion, questioning and criticism would
represent the prevailing mode rather than the exeption in calssroom.
The classroom would become in Lave and Wenger's (1991)
conceptualization, “a community of practice.” a primary focus
would be on learning as social participation, that is, an individual
as an active participant in the practices of social communities, and
in the construction of his or her identity through these communities.
I would furthe argue that this of classroom would provide the
founfation for learning to be a democratic citizen.
The
relationship between classroom talk and citizenship education has
been a focus of research for at least several decades. In 1991 Wilen
and White reviewed more than 25 years of research on forms of
discourse in social studies classroom in the U.S., even citing
studies of classroom questioning from 1912 and 1935. According to
Hahn (1991), p470), social studies educators have long asserted that
studying and disscusing issues is important to democracy, and that
this is supported by research: “Empirical evidence gathered over
the past 25 years, although meager and often coming from
representative samples, consistently supports the position that
positive outcomes are associated with giving students opportunities
to explore controversial issues in an open, supportive atmosphere”.
This
purported relationship between classroom talk and citizenship
education has been strengthened by large-scale research studies in
the 1990s. In 1999 the International Association for the Evaluation
of Education (IEA) studied the civic knowledge of 90,000 fourteen
year old in 28 countries, and found a significant positive
correlation between civic knowledge and discussion of current issues
in class (Torney-Purta, 2002). “The perception of an open climate
for discussion in the classroom was a positive predictor of both
civic knowledge and the likelihood of voting in about three-quarters
of the countries” (Torney-Purta, Lehman, Oswald, & Schulz,
2001, p. 146). In 1998 in the U.S. The National Assesment of
Educational Progress completed a national assesment of civic
knowledge that found positive correlations between civic knowledge
and interest and discussion of issues in class. (Niemi & Junn,
1998, p, 148).
However,
the definition of classroom discussion or dialogue remains somewhat
problematic. Burbules and Bruce (2001) consider dialogue to be one
form of pedagogical communicative relation used in teaching and note
that dialogue can take many forms and that not all of these imply
egalitarian, open-ended modes of inquiry. Wilen and White (1991,
p.483) identified and the two major forms of discourse in social
studies classrooms as recitation and discussion. They noted that
“discussion” is a term that is often used indiscriminately, and
sometimes is used (they feel incorrectly) to label any
teacher-student interaction. Wilen (1990, cited in Wilen & White,
1991, p. 489) distinguished discussion from recitation by defining
discussion as “an educative and structured group conversation
between teacher and students about subject matter at the higher
cognitive levels.” Bridges (1979) noted that the distinctive and
peculiar contribution of discussion to one's knowledge or
understanding is that it sets differing perceptions of a matter under
discussion, thus challenging our own view of things.
Elaborating
on Bridges' ideas, Parker (2003, p.129) noted that the basic
circumstance of discussion is that it is a shared situation with a
purpose to encourage participants to consider others' interpretations
of that matter under discussion: “Discussion is a kind of shared
inquiry the desired outcomes of which rely on the expression and
consideration of diverse views...Discussion results in what could be
called shared understanding. Discussion widens the scope of each
participant's understanding of the object of discussion by building
into that understanding the interpretation and life experiences of
other discussants” (p. 129).
A
large body of work has explored the relationship between forms of
discussion/dialogue and classroom learning (see, e.g., the review of
research on teaching and dialogue, Burbules & Bruce, 2001), but
here the focus is on the work of two researchers who explicitly link
classroom discussion/discourse to the citizenship education: Robin
Alexander working in the U.K. And internationally and Walter Parker
whose primary research focus has been on the U.S. Both Alexander and
Parker attempt to further delinate the nature of classroom
discussion so as to specify its purposes and thus to distinguish it
from less precise models in the literature. Drawing on the work of
the Russian philosopher Bakhtin as well as psychologist,
sociologists, and neuroscientists, Alexander explores the theme of
dialogue as an educative process.
Based
on his cross-national research, Alexander (2000, pp. 526-527) charted
the reccurent use of three kinds of classroom talk:
- Rote: or drilling of facts, ideas and routines through constant repetition;
- Ricitation or the accumulation of knowledge and understanding through question designed to test or stimulate recall of what has previously been encountered, or to cue students to work out answers from clues provided in the question; and
- Eexpository instruction, or imparting information and/or explaining facts, principles or procedures.
However,
although found much less than rote, recitation or exposition,
Alexander identifies two other forms of pedagogical interaction
“which have greater power to provoke cognitive engagement and
understanding:”
- Discussion, or open exchanges between teacher and student, or student and student, with a view to sharing information, exploring ideas or solving problems; and
- Dialogue, or using authentic questioning, discussion and exposition to guide and prompt, minimise risk and error, and expedite the “uptake” or “handover” of concepts and principals.
Alexander
(2005b, pp 31-32) made an explicit link between dialogic teaching and
being a citizen. He argued that “the interactive skills which
children develop through effective dialogic teaching-listening
attentively and responsively to others, framing and asking questions,
presenting and evaluating ideas, arguing and justifying points of
view are among the core skills of citizenship. While the application
of these generic skills is not confined to citizenship education,
Alexander argued that the ability to use them represents a condition
of both the educated person and the active and responsible citizen.
From a
related perspective Parker (2006) argued that competent classroom
discussion is a fundamentally democratic practice and that it is
useful for both learning and governing. He distinguished between two
purposes of classroom discussion and their relevance to citizen
formation. The two classroom structures are called seminar
deliberation. Parker identified these as “purposeful discussions
that enlighten and engage students to separate from them general talk
that has no instructional purpose . He summarized the two kinds of
discussion as shown in table 1:
Table
1
Dimensin
|
Seminar
|
Deliberation
|
Purpose | To reach an enlarged understanding of a powerful text | To reach a decision on what a we should do about a shared problem |
Subject matter | Ideas, issues, and values in a text | Alternatives related to a shared problem |
Opening question (heurestics) | What does this mean? What is happening? | What should we do? What is the best alternative? |
Findings
from recent research support the pivotal nature that classroom
discussion plays in citizenship education. After a stringent review
of studies in the field, the EPPI Review of the impact
of
Citizenship Education on the Provision of Schooling cited the
following findings:
- the quality of dialogue and discourse is central to learning citizenship education
- transformative, dialogical and participatory pedagogies complement and sustain achievement rather than divert attenttion from it
- students should be empowered to voice their views and name and make meaning from their life experiences (Deaking Crick et al., 204, p2).
Even
if enthusiastically endorse these findings, a problem that emerged is
that the conditions for transformative, dialogical and participatory
pedagogies,, as well as giving voice to students, are evidently not
in place in most schools. In a now classic study Goodland (1984)
sought to compare the educational goals (one of which was
citizenship) of U.S. Schools with the daily realities of teaching and
learning. Goodland and a team of 20 trained data collectors visited
over 1,016 classrooms representative of all grade levels across
elementary, middle, and secondary schools, observing what happened on
a minute by minute recording basis. In the course of a 5-hour
secondary scool day, they found that about 2,5 hours were teacher
talk and that teachers outtalked all students put together by a ratio
of 3:1. Student-initiated discussion represented less then 1% of the
instructional time. Working from a list of 15 instructional
techniques, Goodland and his colleagues found that 85-95% of what
went on in classrooms was teacher talk and student answers to teacher
directed questions. There was so little variation in instructional
technique that the researchers could not use it as an independent
variable to account for variations in educational outcomes. The study
concluded that student passivity, individual performance and teacher
control were emphasized in classrooms, while student participation,
cooperation and peer-learning were de-emphasized. If time is the
currency of classroom teaching, discussion had relatively low value
in most classrooms in the Goodland study.
Unfortunately
this may be no less true today (or at least not dramatically
different), even in U.S. Social studies classes. Parker (2006, p. 16)
has pointed out that in the U.S. “A planned classroom discussion in
a K-12 setting is an extraordinary event. Recitation is the norm:
discussion is the exeption.” Hess (2004) reported that even when
they do occur in U.S. social studies classrooms, discussions often
fail to meet the standards of thoughtful discourse because there are
tendencies (a) for teachers to talk too much; (b) for teachers to ask
inauthentic questions; (c) for lack of focus and depth in students'
contributions, and (d) for enequal participation of students.
Based
on data from 28 countries in the IEA Civic Education Study, Losito
and Mintrop (2001, p. 158) reported that teacher centered methods
predominated in civic education classrooms across many countries and
the use of textbooks and recitation are especially prominent. Civic
education was reported to be a matter of knowledge transmission in
most of the countries whereas critical thinking and political
engagement were said to receive less attention (p. 172), Drawing on
the U.S. data from the same study, Hahn (2001, p.87) reported that
classes and schools differs widely on how much variation there is in
instructional activity: According to Hahn, “Some teachers provide
much variety; others very little. Most students seem to be in classes
that fall between the two extremes, with frequent teacher talk and
student recitation related to the textbook and periodically, a
simulation, written project, or discussion of a current issue.”
Hahn hypothesized that students in classes that emphasize basic
skills (such as reading comprehension) may have less experience of
engaging instructional activities. If this were true, it could
indicate that meaningful classroom discussion is correlated with
factors such as economic status as well as ability tracking. In a
study of 26 New York teachers in a range of socio economic settings,
Dull and Murrow (2008) found that sustained interpretative
questioning (as opposed to information gathering questioning) occured
only in classes that served students in the highest SES schools that
were not characterized by diverse student bodies. In an analysis of
the U.S. data from the IEA Civic Education Study, Torney-Purta,
Barber and Wilkenfeld (2007) found that immigrant and Hispanic
students were less likely to be encouraged to voice opinions during
discussions in their classrooms.
In a
recent qualitative study of six 11th and 12th
grade U.S. History and Government classes in the U.S., Niemi and
Niemi (2007) found that teachers often expressed their opinions about
political processes (but not as much about current controversial
issues). However, student opinions were often suppressed in formal
classroom interactions, and discussion of political participation was
limited and couched with cynicism about political processes on the
part of teachers. There was little discussion of contemporary
controversial issues. The researchers were worried that increased
civic teaching without more meaningful and nuanced classroom
discussions will only contribute to the political cynicism and
indifference of students.
Alexander
(2006, p. 15-16) reported that from his own others' research (Galton,
Simon, & Croll, 1980; Galton, Hargreaves, Comber, Pell, &
Wall, 1999; Nystrand, Gamoran, Kachur, & Predergast, 1997) that
the interaction which students experience is largely confined to the
first three items in his typology of teacher talk, rote, recitation
and expository instruction. He cited a UK study that found low
levels of both student interaction and cognitive engagement. Open
questions made up 10% of questioning exchange and most questions
asked where designed to funnel student responses toward a correct
answer (Smith, Hardman. Wall, & Mroz, 2004, p. 408). Broadly
speaking this genre of classroom discourse is frequently referred to
as the IRE/F (Initiation-Response-Evaluation/Follow-up) sequence and,
in several studies, it has been found to be the default option, to
which the teacher always returns (Wells, 2001).
Burbles
and bruce (2001, pp. 8-9) termed the predominant pedagogical model in
the U.S. to be the teacher/student (or T/S) model. The T/S model
assumes that (1) the roles of the teacher and student are given,
distinct, and relatively stable; (2) discourse in the classroom is
mainly for expressing information; (3) teaching is centrally a matter
of intentionally communicating contenct knowledge; and (4) that
education is an activity of instrumental practices directed
intentionally directed toward
specific
ends. The ideal, albeit the most limiting, type of T/S is IRE: “The
teacher questions, the student replies, the teacher praises or
corects the response.” While the IRE cycle may have it use (e.g.,
review of information), the problem, according to Burbles and Bruce,
is that it often tends to colonize pedagogy, driving out alternative
perspectives on teaching and learning (p. 8) However, as they point
out, IRE and other forms of the T/S model are confronting numerous
contemporary challenges. For example, we can no longer regard the
roles of teachers and students in classroom discourse to be distinct,
stable, or without a cultural context.
Given
the literature on the dominance of the IRE model of pedagogy, what
are the obstacles to introducing more dialogic forms of classroom
discussion to support citizenship education? What are the chances of
increasing the opportunities for discussion and dialogue as defined
by Alexander, or the seminars and deliberation as defined by Parker?
The EPPI review of the impact of citizenship education on the
provision of schooling cited earlier also listed the following
findings:
- a facilitative, conversational pedagogy may challenge existing power/authority structures.
- Such pedagogies require a quality of teacher-pupil relationships that are inclusive and respectful. It may require many teachers to let go of control.
- Listening to the voice of the student leads to positive relationships, an atmosphere of trust, and increases participation (Deakin Crick et al. 2004, pp. 2-4)
Based
on the above discussion, the sizeable gap between “facilitative,
conversational pedagogy” and predominant pedagogical model in most
classrooms (IRE) should be noted. Levinson and Brantmeier (2006), in
an informative effort to link civic education to the concept of
communities of practice and situated leaning, identified two broad
challenges that are also pertinent here: the challenge of authority
and the challenge of authenticity. In regard to authority, how can
the teacher's exercise of authority be constructed so as to most
closely approximate the kinds of authority that students are likely
to encounter in a democracy? And what are the limits of student power
in a school? In the case of authenticity, how authentic can classroom
discussions be in the world of civic practice that are the
discussions reference points and how fully can teachers negotiate the
syllabus with students? An Ofsted report (Garner, 2006) argued that
pupils should be encouraged to challenge authority in the new
compulsory secondary school citizenship lessons. The report rejected
the notion that citizenship education should be about teaching
“compliance, good behaviour and the acceptance of values” and
argued that the best practice instead focused on challenging and
promoting a critical democracy.
As
indicated above, however, this kind of dialogic teaching is at odds
with the traditional transmission model. Parker (2006) has reminded
us that the prevailing model has strong support from those (on the
right) who are skeptical of anything that takes time from curriculum
coverage and direct instruction by the teacher, as well as those (on
the left) who fear discussion can become just another form of
domination when marginalized voices of resistance, educators need to
decide whether to withdraw from the dialogic project or enter the
fray (p. 15).
As
EPPI review (Deakin Crick et al., 2004) suggested, entering the fray
will require supporting teachers to develop appropriate professional
skills to engage in discourse and dialogue to facilitate citizenship
education. Moreover, the report added that participative and
democratic processes in school leadership require particular
attitudes and skills on the part of teachers and students: “Linked
to this is the important of enabling teachers to trust their own
professional judgement, working within a culture of professional
responsibility” (p. 6).
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