Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School

Despite a growing recognition that established notions of democracy, nationhood, citizenship, and ethnicity are giving way to emerging notions of democratic, multicultural, global citizenship, there are few curricular guidelines to achieve this expectation. This is especially the case at the eleme...

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Main Authors: Michael O'Sullivan, Diane Vetter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2007-05-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/124
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spelling doaj-8bc06a12afd140309e0d66f3d2d465892020-11-25T02:02:54ZengUniversity of WindsorJournal of Teaching and Learning1911-82792007-05-014210.22329/jtl.v4i2.124Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 SchoolMichael O'Sullivan0Diane Vetter1Brock UniversityYork UniversityDespite a growing recognition that established notions of democracy, nationhood, citizenship, and ethnicity are giving way to emerging notions of democratic, multicultural, global citizenship, there are few curricular guidelines to achieve this expectation. This is especially the case at the elementary level where there isn’t even a consensus that such an approach is appropriate. Faced with this lack of consensus and the resulting lack of curricular leadership and driven by the need to respond to the needs and interests of their students, elementary teachers, influenced by the particularities of their local circumstances, follow their instincts and rely on each other with respect to how to teach what is variously called global education, global citizenship education, or education from a global perspective. Elementary teachers are reshaping the practice of what is referred to in this paper as global (citizenship) education at the classroom level. While such innovations can frequently lead to creative results, they can also result in highly idiosyncratic interpretations of what constitutes the most effective approach to teaching from a global perspective or what constitutes global citizenship. This paper is a case study of the efforts of the staff of one small-town Ontario elementary school to infuse a global perspective throughout the grades from K to 8 and across the curriculum.https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/124EducationPractitionerGlobalCitizenshipStudentTeacher
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael O'Sullivan
Diane Vetter
spellingShingle Michael O'Sullivan
Diane Vetter
Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
Journal of Teaching and Learning
Education
Practitioner
Global
Citizenship
Student
Teacher
author_facet Michael O'Sullivan
Diane Vetter
author_sort Michael O'Sullivan
title Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
title_short Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
title_full Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
title_fullStr Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
title_full_unstemmed Teacher-Initiated, Student-Centered Global Education in a K to 8 School
title_sort teacher-initiated, student-centered global education in a k to 8 school
publisher University of Windsor
series Journal of Teaching and Learning
issn 1911-8279
publishDate 2007-05-01
description Despite a growing recognition that established notions of democracy, nationhood, citizenship, and ethnicity are giving way to emerging notions of democratic, multicultural, global citizenship, there are few curricular guidelines to achieve this expectation. This is especially the case at the elementary level where there isn’t even a consensus that such an approach is appropriate. Faced with this lack of consensus and the resulting lack of curricular leadership and driven by the need to respond to the needs and interests of their students, elementary teachers, influenced by the particularities of their local circumstances, follow their instincts and rely on each other with respect to how to teach what is variously called global education, global citizenship education, or education from a global perspective. Elementary teachers are reshaping the practice of what is referred to in this paper as global (citizenship) education at the classroom level. While such innovations can frequently lead to creative results, they can also result in highly idiosyncratic interpretations of what constitutes the most effective approach to teaching from a global perspective or what constitutes global citizenship. This paper is a case study of the efforts of the staff of one small-town Ontario elementary school to infuse a global perspective throughout the grades from K to 8 and across the curriculum.
topic Education
Practitioner
Global
Citizenship
Student
Teacher
url https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/124
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelosullivan teacherinitiatedstudentcenteredglobaleducationinakto8school
AT dianevetter teacherinitiatedstudentcenteredglobaleducationinakto8school
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