“In spite of the way the world is”

IF 1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Timothy G. Cashman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide comparative perspectives on how educators teach issues that affect two countries with a history of governmental tensions. The investigation examines how teachers in Cuban classrooms engage in discourses on the recent developments in Cuban and US relations, including the teaching of historical and territorial issues. This research considers border pedagogy, critical border dialogism and critical border praxis as approaches for those who educate on the effects of US international policies. Ultimately, pragmatic hope offers the possibilities for an emergent third space for Cuban and US relations, including educational exchanges. Design/methodology/approach The research took place in Cuba during an educational exchange to Cuban secondary and university educational sites. Cuban educators of pedagogy and social education engaged in dialogue and shared information on how they address US international policies during their classroom discussions. The researcher employed methodologies that followed Stake’s (2000) model for a substantive case study. Impressions, data, records and salient elements at the observed site were recorded. Transcriptions were documented for face-to-face interviews and hour-long focus group sessions. Participants also logged responses to written survey questions. The study focused on how Cuban educators taught, discussed and addressed the US international policies in classrooms. Findings Heteroglossia, meliorism, critical cosmopolitanism, nepantla, dialogic feminism and pragmatic hope were components of the data analysis. Heteroglossia was an essential consideration throughout the study as multiple interpretations of Cuban and US interconnectedness emerged. Meliorism factored into Cuban educators’ commitments to their professions. Critical cosmopolitanism developed as educators put forth different conceptualizations of human rights and democracy. Nepantla emerged as a key aspect as indigenous and self-determined viewpoints emerged. Dialogic feminism was preeminent as patriarchy continues to exist, despite a new awareness of gender roles and gender violence. Pragmatic hope offers possibilities for a transnational community of inquiry and collaboration. Research limitations/implications The most obvious limitation to this study is, as a case study, the limited scope of perception. Practical implications If future relations between Cuban and the US are deemed uncertain, critical border praxis has an essential role in addressing new sets of uncertainties. This study recommends that educational communities engage in discourses addressing ongoing issues facing the dynamic, fluid border environs. Critical border praxis provides conditions in which we, as educators and members of diverse communities of learners, become cross-borders and broaden the possibilities to achieve what had been considered the unattainable. Resources need to be prioritized and redirected toward educational efforts on national, state and local levels so critical border praxis becomes a reality. Social implications Through transnational and transborder engagements, such as educational exchanges, both US and Cuban educators are provided opportunities to reflect on the strengths and weaknesses of their own educational systems. The role of education, formal and informal, then serves to transform perceptions one-by-one, school-by-school, community-by-community and to influence policy makers to reconstruct education country-by-country as part of pragmatic hope for an enduring Pax Universalis. Pax Universalis serves as a third space where transborder students and educators alike are positioned as co-creators of knowledge and agents of change. Originality/value This study proposes a new emergent third space resulting from critical border dialogism that utilizes border pedagogy and critical pedagogies of place to seek new zones of mutual respect and cooperation among educators. Common educational understandings are the key starting point for a critical border praxis that facilitates ongoing dialogue between the two countries and offers pragmatic hope for the futures of both nations and opportunities to ameliorate relationships. An emergent third space is possible through sustained critical border praxis, a praxis that seeks to address points of contention and the bridges that need crossing between the two neighboring countries.
“不管世界是怎样的”
本文的目的是提供比较的视角,以了解教育工作者如何教授影响两个历史上政府关系紧张的国家的问题。调查考察了古巴课堂上的教师如何就古巴和美国关系的最新发展进行演讲,包括历史和领土问题的教学。本研究将边界教育学、批判性边界对话和批判性边界实践作为那些教育美国国际政策影响的人的方法。最终,务实的希望为古巴和美国的关系提供了一个新兴的第三空间,包括教育交流。设计/方法/方法这项研究是在古巴中学和大学教育场所的教育交流期间进行的。古巴教育学和社会教育工作者参与了对话,并在课堂讨论中分享了他们如何应对美国国际政策的信息。研究者采用的方法遵循了斯特克(2000)的模型进行了实质性的案例研究。记录观察地点的印象、数据、记录和突出要素。面对面访谈和长达一小时的焦点小组会议记录下来。参与者还记录了对书面调查问题的回答。这项研究的重点是古巴教育工作者如何在课堂上教授、讨论和应对美国的国际政策。发现异质舌语、改良主义、批判世界主义、nepantla、对话女性主义和实用主义希望是数据分析的组成部分。随着对古巴和美国相互联系的多种解释的出现,异语是整个研究中必不可少的考虑因素。改良主义是古巴教育工作者对其职业的承诺的一个因素。批判世界主义随着教育家提出人权和民主的不同概念而发展。随着土著和自决观点的出现,Nepantla成为一个关键方面。尽管人们对性别角色和性别暴力有了新的认识,但父权制仍然存在,对话式女权主义表现突出。务实的希望为跨国社区的探索和合作提供了可能性。研究局限性/启示本研究最明显的局限性是,作为一个案例研究,感知范围有限。如果古巴和美国之间的未来关系被认为是不确定的,关键的边界实践在解决新的不确定性方面起着至关重要的作用。本研究建议教育界参与讨论动态、流动的边界环境所面临的持续问题。关键的边界实践为我们提供了条件,作为教育者和不同学习者社区的成员,我们可以跨越国界,扩大实现被认为无法实现的目标的可能性。需要将资源优先分配给国家、州和地方各级的教育工作,使关键的边境实践成为现实。社会影响通过跨国和跨界合作,如教育交流,美国和古巴的教育工作者都有机会反思各自教育体系的优缺点。因此,教育的作用,无论是正式的还是非正式的,都有助于逐个、逐个学校、逐个社区地转变观念,并影响决策者重建各国的教育,作为实现持久普遍和平的务实希望的一部分。Pax Universalis作为第三个空间,跨境学生和教育工作者都被定位为知识的共同创造者和变革的推动者。原创性/价值本研究提出了一个新的新兴的第三空间,由批判性边界对话产生,利用边界教育学和批判性地方教育学来寻求教育者之间相互尊重和合作的新区域。共同的教育理解是关键的边界实践的关键起点,它促进了两国之间正在进行的对话,为两国的未来提供了务实的希望和改善关系的机会。通过持续的关键边界实践,一个新兴的第三空间是可能的,这种实践寻求解决两个邻国之间的争论点和需要跨越的桥梁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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