Educator group welcome call for citizenship education
Educator group welcome call for citizenship education
A group of educators has welcomed the
Constitutional Advisory Panel's call for a national strategy
for civic and citizenship education in schools. but argues
that it needs to be part of a broader effort to better
enable young people as effective citizens of their
communities.
"One of the key purposes of schools is to equip children to participate in, and help shape, their communities -- from local to global," says Ced Simpson from the recently-formed Educating for Citizenship steering group. "This understanding needs to guide the whole school curriculum and the way schools are organised, not just a few isolated social studies topics."
"The available evidence suggests strongly that civics and citizenship education needs to start with young people's current role and concerns as citizens, developing understanding of relevant institutions and processes, and providing opportunities to take effective action on those concerns. It begins with the opportunities children have to think about and help shape their own learning community."
The group, which includes some of the leading thinkers and practitioners in the field, says that there are many examples of outstanding learning for citizenship in New Zealand schools, but the "citizenship education" theme is not clear in the national curricula, and experience and success is rarely shared between schools and within the education system generally. Educating for Citizenship is being developed as a framework for schools and teachers to address this.
ENDS