Literacy: A lever for citizenship?

IF 2.3 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-10 DOI:10.1007/s11159-023-09998-6
Anna Robinson-Pant
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Within citizenship education, literacy is often promoted in a narrow functional sense of skills for civic engagement or is used synonymously with "knowledge" to refer to an awareness-raising process around rights. Through an analysis of evolving models of citizenship, this article moves beyond literacy for citizenship to consider the ways in which literacy learning can emerge through active citizenship. Drawing on published ethnographic studies of literacy in everyday life to analyse both the symbolic and instrumental meanings of literacy in specific contexts, the author introduces a social practice lens on literacy and citizenship. She explores the pedagogical implications for literacy within citizenship education, particularly in relation to informal learning of "real literacies", critical digital literacy to distinguish "fake news" and literature as a way of entering someone else's experiences. UNESCO's current vision for global citizenship education as nurturing empathy and understanding between peoples implies that literacy providers need to recognise participants as not only consumers, but as co-constructors of texts.

识字:公民身份的杠杆?
在公民教育中,扫盲通常是在公民参与技能的狭义功能意义上推广的,或者与“知识”同义,指的是围绕权利的提高认识过程。通过分析公民身份的演变模式,本文超越了公民身份的识字,思考了通过积极的公民身份实现识字学习的方式。根据已发表的关于日常生活中识字的民族志研究,分析识字在特定背景下的象征意义和工具意义,作者介绍了识字和公民身份的社会实践视角。她探讨了公民教育中识字的教学意义,特别是与“真实文学”的非正式学习、区分“假新闻”的批判性数字识字以及作为进入他人经历的一种方式的文学有关。联合国教科文组织目前将全球公民教育视为培养各国人民之间的同理心和理解,这意味着扫盲提供者需要认识到参与者不仅是消费者,而且是文本的共同构建者。
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来源期刊
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
6.20%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: The International Review of Education – Journal of Lifelong Learning (IRE) is edited by the UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning, a global centre of excellence for lifelong learning and learning societies. Founded in 1955, IRE is the world’s longest-running peer-reviewed journal of comparative education, serving not only academic and research communities but, equally, high-level policy and practice readerships throughout the world. Today, IRE provides a forum for theoretically-informed and policy-relevant applied research in lifelong and life-wide learning in international and comparative contexts. Preferred topic areas include adult education, non-formal education, adult literacy, open and distance learning, vocational education and workplace learning, new access routes to formal education, lifelong learning policies, and various applications of the lifelong learning paradigm.Consistent with the mandate of UNESCO, the IRE fosters scholarly exchange on lifelong learning from all regions of the world, particularly developing and transition countries. In addition to inviting submissions from authors for its general issues, the IRE also publishes regular guest-edited special issues on key and emerging topics in lifelong learning.
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