将公民身份想象为非公民并进行公民教育:动荡时期移民社会研究教师的地位与公民教育

IF 2.5 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Yeji Kim
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引用次数: 9

摘要

摘要本研究探讨了纽约市移民社会研究教师的地位,以及这些地位如何影响他们对公民教育的看法和教学实践。研究结果表明,移民教师的少数种族、文化、语言和宗教背景,加上他们在美国缺乏公民身份,造成并加剧了各种形式的排斥,以及他们自己在当前种族主义、以美国为中心和反移民环境中的脆弱感。尽管如此,这些教师制定了一系列策略来应对他们面临的不确定性和不归属感,与本国教师进行跨国活动,并与当地学校社区的学生结成联盟。通过他们复杂而独特的地位,这些移民教师塑造了他们对公民身份的理解和实践,这使人们越来越关注民族国家和白人。他们作为有色人种移民的生活轨迹进一步成为他们教授公民教育的宝贵财富。这项研究为社会研究教育工作者、公民奖学金和教师教育研究提供了启示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Imagining and teaching citizenship as non-citizens: Migrant social studies teachers’ positionalities and citizenship education in turbulent times
ABSTRACT This study explored the positionalities of migrant social studies teachers in New York City and how those positionalities inform their perceptions and pedagogical practices of citizenship education. The findings demonstrated that migrant teachers’ minoritized racial, cultural, linguistic, and religious backgrounds, together with their lack of citizenship status in the United States, created and accentuated various forms of exclusion, as well as a sense of their own vulnerability in the current racist, U.S.-centric, and anti-immigration climate. Nevertheless, these teachers have crafted a range of tactics to navigate the uncertainties they face and their sense of non-belonging, performing transnational activities with those in their home countries and forging alliances with their students in their local school communities. Through their complex and unique positionalities, these migrant teachers have shaped their understanding and practices of citizenship which decenter the increasing focus on the nation-state and Whiteness. Their life trajectories as migrants of color further served as valuable assets in their teaching citizenship education. This study provides implications for social studies educators, citizenship scholarship, and teacher education research.
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来源期刊
Theory and Research in Social Education
Theory and Research in Social Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
30.80%
发文量
36
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