Preparing for life in the global village: producing global citizen subjects in UK schools
Allan, AJ; Charles, C
Date: 22 October 2013
Article
Journal
Research Papers in Education
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The practice of educating young people for global citizenship has garnered a great deal of
attention in recent years. Whilst much of the research in this field has focused on pedagogical
or curriculum matters, a small body of work has attempted to explore it in a broader sense:
viewing it as a process involving the production of ...
The practice of educating young people for global citizenship has garnered a great deal of
attention in recent years. Whilst much of the research in this field has focused on pedagogical
or curriculum matters, a small body of work has attempted to explore it in a broader sense:
viewing it as a process involving the production of global citizen subjectivity. This paper
adds to this growing body of research by offering a detailed discursive analysis of empirical
data generated in fieldwork in two UK schools. Global travel will be identified as a key
practice which was utilised by the students in these schools and it will be used as an
interpretive lens through which to further explore their production of successful, mobile,
global citizen subjectivities. The paper will argue that this was a dynamic process: negotiated
across multiple spaces and through a range of complex and contradictory images and
representations. The paper concludes with some thoughts about the practice of school travel
and how it might effectively be focused upon in future research.
School of Education
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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