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Figured worlds of citizenship: examining differences made in “making a difference” in an elementary school classroom

Version 2 2024-06-04, 08:13
Version 1 2016-07-01, 13:33
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 08:13 authored by Eve MayesEve Mayes, DL Mitra, SC Serriere
This article explores how two elementary school students responded to their teacher’s invitation in a civic classroom to make a difference to the world. We consider how the teacher framed the construct of civic efficacy and how the students refracted these ideas in their navigation of a civic education project. Closely analyzing these students’ experiences and responses, we question what differences are made when students are encouraged to think of themselves as citizens who can make a difference. Noting dissonances and ambivalences in the students’ responses, the conceptual resources of “figured worlds” enable an analysis of the interplay of discourses, interactions, sensory experiences, and material artifacts as civic identities are constituted. The two students’ differing responses are analyzed in relation to other figured worlds that students and teachers daily negotiate: of compliant citizenship, productive citizenship, and consumer citizenship. The overlaps, dissonances, and/or divergences in discourses and artifacts from various figured worlds of citizenship render some students more recognizable as civically “engaged” and “efficacious” than others.

History

Journal

American educational research journal

Volume

53

Pagination

605-638

Location

Thousand Oaks, Calif.

ISSN

0002-8312

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Sage

Issue

3

Publisher

Sage Publications