From the Editors

Teaching about globalizations and our interconnectedness with people and places around the world is an essential component of K-12 and higher education, but knowledge about global issues and news is not enough. Increased mobility, digital communication, and cultural hybridity, along with oppression...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jason Harshman, Emin Kılınç
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Studies Education Research 2016-11-01
Series:Journal of Social Studies Education Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jsser.org/article/view/5000208605/5000176552
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spelling doaj-5a0eaed4a20b4051b556259f097a61ab2020-11-25T03:53:51ZengJournal of Social Studies Education Research Journal of Social Studies Education Research1309-91081309-91082016-11-0172IVIFrom the EditorsJason Harshman0Emin Kılınç1University of IowaDumlupınar UniversityTeaching about globalizations and our interconnectedness with people and places around the world is an essential component of K-12 and higher education, but knowledge about global issues and news is not enough. Increased mobility, digital communication, and cultural hybridity, along with oppression and social injustice require that educators and students not only be able to communicate and collaborate with people different from them, but regularly engage in critical self-reflection around perceived norms and values. In January 2016, the editors of this special issue distributed a call for theoretical, research-based, and practitioner oriented manuscripts on teaching and learning that bring social studies and global citizenship education together. Evidence by the transnational contributions published within this issue of the Journal of Social Studies Education Research, the place of global citizenship education within the social studies is evolving, multifaceted, and not without complications. In short: just how it should be. http://jsser.org/article/view/5000208605/5000176552social studies educationglobal educationJSSER
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language English
format Article
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author Jason Harshman
Emin Kılınç
spellingShingle Jason Harshman
Emin Kılınç
From the Editors
Journal of Social Studies Education Research
social studies education
global education
JSSER
author_facet Jason Harshman
Emin Kılınç
author_sort Jason Harshman
title From the Editors
title_short From the Editors
title_full From the Editors
title_fullStr From the Editors
title_full_unstemmed From the Editors
title_sort from the editors
publisher Journal of Social Studies Education Research
series Journal of Social Studies Education Research
issn 1309-9108
1309-9108
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Teaching about globalizations and our interconnectedness with people and places around the world is an essential component of K-12 and higher education, but knowledge about global issues and news is not enough. Increased mobility, digital communication, and cultural hybridity, along with oppression and social injustice require that educators and students not only be able to communicate and collaborate with people different from them, but regularly engage in critical self-reflection around perceived norms and values. In January 2016, the editors of this special issue distributed a call for theoretical, research-based, and practitioner oriented manuscripts on teaching and learning that bring social studies and global citizenship education together. Evidence by the transnational contributions published within this issue of the Journal of Social Studies Education Research, the place of global citizenship education within the social studies is evolving, multifaceted, and not without complications. In short: just how it should be.
topic social studies education
global education
JSSER
url http://jsser.org/article/view/5000208605/5000176552
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