Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging

In response to the violence of our era and the vast movement of people around the globe, the author argues that effective social studies education should include an understanding ourselves within communities of shared fate collectively building strategies of civility. Through conceptual analysis, t...

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Main Author: Martha J. Ritter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/33
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spelling doaj-40b4ff9963c84cd0a6b5f5e728e38f9d2021-09-07T07:50:24ZengOpenED NetworkJournal of Curriculum Studies Research2690-27882020-05-012110.46303/jcsr.02.01.1Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for BelongingMartha J. Ritter0Cabrini University In response to the violence of our era and the vast movement of people around the globe, the author argues that effective social studies education should include an understanding ourselves within communities of shared fate collectively building strategies of civility. Through conceptual analysis, the paper supports arguments that citizenship education should be grounded in communities of fate, rather than a sense of shared identity as a member of a particular country. Shared fate is the idea that our lives are intertwined with others in ways we perceive and ways we cannot. Civility is elaborated as concrete strategies that support or make possible broad participation in the demos. Looking at citizenship through the lens of communities of shared fate changes how we think about belonging and our responsibilities to one another in our shared world. The author provides examples of early career educators’ moral commitment to teaching from a perspective of shared fate and as well as their concerns to link the conceptual work to concrete practices within elementary school classrooms. https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/33educationcurriculum studiesCitizenship educationethicsSocial studies education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martha J. Ritter
spellingShingle Martha J. Ritter
Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
education
curriculum studies
Citizenship education
ethics
Social studies education
author_facet Martha J. Ritter
author_sort Martha J. Ritter
title Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
title_short Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
title_full Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
title_fullStr Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
title_full_unstemmed Civility and Shared Fate: Social Studies Teaching as Teaching for Belonging
title_sort civility and shared fate: social studies teaching as teaching for belonging
publisher OpenED Network
series Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
issn 2690-2788
publishDate 2020-05-01
description In response to the violence of our era and the vast movement of people around the globe, the author argues that effective social studies education should include an understanding ourselves within communities of shared fate collectively building strategies of civility. Through conceptual analysis, the paper supports arguments that citizenship education should be grounded in communities of fate, rather than a sense of shared identity as a member of a particular country. Shared fate is the idea that our lives are intertwined with others in ways we perceive and ways we cannot. Civility is elaborated as concrete strategies that support or make possible broad participation in the demos. Looking at citizenship through the lens of communities of shared fate changes how we think about belonging and our responsibilities to one another in our shared world. The author provides examples of early career educators’ moral commitment to teaching from a perspective of shared fate and as well as their concerns to link the conceptual work to concrete practices within elementary school classrooms.
topic education
curriculum studies
Citizenship education
ethics
Social studies education
url https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/33
work_keys_str_mv AT marthajritter civilityandsharedfatesocialstudiesteachingasteachingforbelonging
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