Moral Education in China: Teaching and Teachers
In: Citizenship, Character and Values Education Ser
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In: Citizenship, Character and Values Education Ser
In: Emerging perspectives on education in China
In: Education and urban society, Band 50, Heft 7, S. 641-669
ISSN: 1552-3535
Many studies have noted the important role family socioeconomic status (SES) plays in students' out-of-school learning. However, very little is known about the relationship between student's SES and citizenship education in out-of-school contexts. To address this research gap, this study conducted an out-of-school citizenship education survey (involving 2,950 teachers, 7,388 students, 2,564 parents, and 112 out-of-school education organizations in Shanghai, China), in 2015, to explore the relationship between SES and students' out-of-school citizenship education. This article found SES affected primary and junior middle school (but not high school) students' participation in out-of-school citizenship education. This article adopted a power–knowledge relationship perspective to explain this pattern, and found that the relationship between education and power is not so mechanical that only powerful groups in society can determine knowledge and learning; instead, educational forces and students may mediate the influence of SES.
In: Education and urban society, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 77-97
ISSN: 1552-3535
Migration's influences on citizenship education were widely discussed in the literature. However, most studies were based on international migration that drew experience from, for example, North America and Europe. Less attention was paid to internal migration or developing areas. This article takes China as an example, which is a country that has experienced and will experience extensive internal migration, to analyze the relationship between internal migration and citizenship education. This article selects Shenzhen as a study site, for it reflects China's population movements and city development in the last three decades. Interviews with 38 teachers in six schools and relevant university scholars, education bureau officers in 2008 were analyzed for this article. The article reports Shenzhen citizenship education's responses to three challenges brought by internal migration. The analyses of the findings reveal that different from assimilation and multiculturalism approaches in citizenship education, Shenzhen's citizenship education paid less efforts to diminish/reconcile migrants' ethnic, cultural differences. Instead, it inclined to address the general problems caused by the migration phenomenon. Similarly, it also laid efforts on migrant integration and social cohesion.
In: International sociology: the journal of the International Sociological Association, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 497-516
ISSN: 1461-7242
With specific reference to Shanghai city in China, this study investigates elite middle school students' citizenship competence learning – political identity, scientific spirit, legal awareness, and public participation. The study uses a mixed methodology of questionnaires, classroom observations, document analyses, and interviews to collect data and identifies three patterns of students' citizenship competence learning. This study provides empirical data that supplement the existing literature on elite students' citizenship learning in the context of China.