Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States

Educators everywhere consider how best to prepare students with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviors to be informed, engaged, and caring 21st century citizens. This article provides a report of an ethnographic transnational field study examining how 30 middle and high school educators loca...

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Main Authors: Amy Roberts, Lydiah Nganga, Joanie James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Studies Education Research 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Social Studies Education Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/952
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spelling doaj-873e338196c441acb2d6c8f2c789ff182020-11-25T03:54:20ZengJournal of Social Studies Education Research Journal of Social Studies Education Research1309-91081309-91082019-12-0110497126412Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United StatesAmy Roberts0Lydiah Nganga1Joanie James2University of WyomingUniversity of WyomingUniversity of WyomingEducators everywhere consider how best to prepare students with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviors to be informed, engaged, and caring 21st century citizens. This article provides a report of an ethnographic transnational field study examining how 30 middle and high school educators located in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States, conceive of citizenship and civic education based on textbook use, classroom materials, pedagogical practices, and instructional strategies. Data sources included field logs, debriefing sessions, one-to-one interviews, focus group discussions, classroom observations, a questionnaire, textbook evaluations, and review of media documents. Participants in the United States network emphasized multiple perspectives applied as a lens to the study of contemporary global issues. Costa Rican participants mirrored this description but with emphasis on nationalistic goals to equip students with skills to work for tangible improvements in the lives of Costa Rican citizens. In the Myanmar context, participants relied almost exclusively on textbooks; in this case, context and culture informed the aims and approaches of civic and citizenship education. Implications contribute to transnational discourse addressing the practice of civic and citizenship education internationally. This study expands dominant definitions and the importance of a qualitative transnational framework to examine citizenship and civics curricula in diverse systems.https://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/952civic education, citizenship education, curriculum, 21-century citizens, transnational field study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amy Roberts
Lydiah Nganga
Joanie James
spellingShingle Amy Roberts
Lydiah Nganga
Joanie James
Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
Journal of Social Studies Education Research
civic education, citizenship education, curriculum, 21-century citizens, transnational field study
author_facet Amy Roberts
Lydiah Nganga
Joanie James
author_sort Amy Roberts
title Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
title_short Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
title_full Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
title_fullStr Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
title_full_unstemmed Citizenship and Civic Education in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States
title_sort citizenship and civic education in costa rica, myanmar, and the united states
publisher Journal of Social Studies Education Research
series Journal of Social Studies Education Research
issn 1309-9108
1309-9108
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Educators everywhere consider how best to prepare students with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviors to be informed, engaged, and caring 21st century citizens. This article provides a report of an ethnographic transnational field study examining how 30 middle and high school educators located in Costa Rica, Myanmar, and the United States, conceive of citizenship and civic education based on textbook use, classroom materials, pedagogical practices, and instructional strategies. Data sources included field logs, debriefing sessions, one-to-one interviews, focus group discussions, classroom observations, a questionnaire, textbook evaluations, and review of media documents. Participants in the United States network emphasized multiple perspectives applied as a lens to the study of contemporary global issues. Costa Rican participants mirrored this description but with emphasis on nationalistic goals to equip students with skills to work for tangible improvements in the lives of Costa Rican citizens. In the Myanmar context, participants relied almost exclusively on textbooks; in this case, context and culture informed the aims and approaches of civic and citizenship education. Implications contribute to transnational discourse addressing the practice of civic and citizenship education internationally. This study expands dominant definitions and the importance of a qualitative transnational framework to examine citizenship and civics curricula in diverse systems.
topic civic education, citizenship education, curriculum, 21-century citizens, transnational field study
url https://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/952
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