학술논문

We All Have Stories That Are Meaningful: Critical Civic Engagement in an Urban Classroom
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Tests/Questionnaires
Author
Source
Research Issues in Contemporary Education. 2021 6(2):36-69.
Subject
Civics
Citizenship Education
Citizen Participation
Urban Schools
High School Students
Program Implementation
Advanced Placement
United States Government (Course)
Cooperative Learning
Urban Education
Language
English
Abstract
Critical civic engagement is a pedagogical framework that suggests a return of civic education to American schooling is not simply about providing civics for all students, but that civic education, particularly among marginalized urban high school students, must engage lived experiences, develop critical thought, and facilitate informed civic action. The author proposes that implementation of a critical civic engagement framework can lead to important outcomes in students' civic identity development. Using teacher interviews, classroom observations, and a student focus group in a diverse urban high school, this blended phenomenological/instrumental case study in an AP Government classroom examined how a teacher enacted and experienced critical civic engagement pedagogy and how her students experienced the learning process. The author found evidence that the teacher found renewal in her practice and, as students engaged in issues that are important to them and their families, critically examined political systems, and acted purposefully in collaboration with their peers, experienced growth in their sense of civic identity, purpose, and political efficacy.