Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?

The global financial crisis has impacted upon the way of life of young Europeans with great severity. Across most European countries youth unemployment has remained stubbornly high for many years, compounding the effects of the crisis on the social and psychological well-being of young people. Give...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Murray Print
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bielefeld University 2014-04-01
Series:Journal of Social Science Education
Online Access:http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/713
id doaj-b7bf1b81447246f58a1cf06b0e7d8236
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b7bf1b81447246f58a1cf06b0e7d82362020-11-25T00:51:26ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1618-52932014-04-0113310.4119/jsse-713Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?Murray Print The global financial crisis has impacted upon the way of life of young Europeans with great severity. Across most European countries youth unemployment has remained stubbornly high for many years, compounding the effects of the crisis on the social and psychological well-being of young people. Given that crises are highly likely to occur in the future are there ways to help prepare young people to build resilience to meet an unpredictable future? For a long-term approach to building youth resilience the role of the school is highly significant. Consequently this article asks - what are the elements in a school curriculum that can build resilience for times of crisis? The article explores the case of the Australian Curriculum: Civics and Citizenship as a possible approach to building resilience amongst school students. The curriculum identifies knowledge, skills and values that students may acquire through this curriculum that build resilience. http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/713
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Murray Print
spellingShingle Murray Print
Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
Journal of Social Science Education
author_facet Murray Print
author_sort Murray Print
title Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
title_short Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
title_full Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
title_fullStr Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
title_full_unstemmed Can Resilience be built Through a Citizenship Education Curriculum?
title_sort can resilience be built through a citizenship education curriculum?
publisher Bielefeld University
series Journal of Social Science Education
issn 1618-5293
publishDate 2014-04-01
description The global financial crisis has impacted upon the way of life of young Europeans with great severity. Across most European countries youth unemployment has remained stubbornly high for many years, compounding the effects of the crisis on the social and psychological well-being of young people. Given that crises are highly likely to occur in the future are there ways to help prepare young people to build resilience to meet an unpredictable future? For a long-term approach to building youth resilience the role of the school is highly significant. Consequently this article asks - what are the elements in a school curriculum that can build resilience for times of crisis? The article explores the case of the Australian Curriculum: Civics and Citizenship as a possible approach to building resilience amongst school students. The curriculum identifies knowledge, skills and values that students may acquire through this curriculum that build resilience.
url http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/713
work_keys_str_mv AT murrayprint canresiliencebebuiltthroughacitizenshipeducationcurriculum
_version_ 1725245774088896512