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Between policy and a hard pedagogical place: the emotional geographies of teaching for citizenship in low socioeconomic schools

journal contribution
posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by Ros BlackRos Black
Reflecting an international trend, Australian education policy increasingly charges schools with fostering active citizens who have the will and capacity to improve the democratic fabric and drive needed social change. This policy prescription also resonates with some teachers’ critical commitments to pedagogical practices that encourage young people to see themselves as transformative citizens capable of engineering a more just and equitable society. In particular, in low socio-economic school contexts, however, the pursuit of such practices may be subject to the complex physical and emotional geographies that attend the project of schooling in such contexts. In this article, I consider the empirical data derived from my recent discourse analysis of two schools in which teachers have introduced what I have termed the pedagogies of active citizenship. Both of these schools are located in low socio-economic Australian communities, that is, communities where structural, socio-geographic and socio-economic forms of marginalisation are an issue. I consider what motivates, enables and authorises such teachers, as well as what risks may attend the championing of such pedagogies in contexts that are subject to conflicting or competing education discourses and priorities. Theoretically, I draw on ideas of risk as well as on a growing body of scholarship that is concerned with the emotional geographies of citizenship and schooling.

History

Journal

Pedagogy, culture & society

Volume

23

Issue

3

Pagination

369 - 388

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1468-1366

eISSN

1747-5104

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Pedagogy, Culture & Society

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