Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics

Criticality (the ability to think, self-reflect and act critically, as well as reason analytically) is framed as an important goal of education generally, and citizenship education specifically. However, literature and research within subject didactics tend to frame criticality as subject-specific,...

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Main Author: Ledman, Kristina
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Umeå University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-75849
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author Ledman, Kristina
author_facet Ledman, Kristina
author_sort Ledman, Kristina
collection Karlstad University: Publications (DIVA)
description Criticality (the ability to think, self-reflect and act critically, as well as reason analytically) is framed as an important goal of education generally, and citizenship education specifically. However, literature and research within subject didactics tend to frame criticality as subject-specific, hence its conceptualisation can vary substantially depending on epistemological and research traditions. Thus, this paper compares its treatment in the same subject, civics, in curricula of the five Nordic countries. Civics is an interesting case as it is a major element of citizenship education, which varies somewhat among the five countries. Four ideal types of criticality are elaborated and deployed in the analysis: general, disciplinary, moral and ideological criticality. The results reveal substantial differences between the five compared curricula. They also reveal apparent correlations between civics as a single-subject construct (as in Denmark and Sweden) and disciplinary criticality, and between civics as an integrated curriculum construct (as in Iceland) and general criticality. Overall, the disciplinary view of criticality slightly prevails in the five compared curricula. The results raise questions about contextual factors’ effects on how criticality is constructed in school subjects, and helps reflection on what we actually refer to when we talk about a certain school subject.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
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institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftkarlstadsuniv
op_relation Nordidactica : Journal of Humanities and Social Science Education, 2000-9879, 2019, 2019:3, s. 149-167
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
publishDate 2019
publisher Umeå University
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spelling ftkarlstadsuniv:oai:DiVA.org:kau-75849 2025-01-16T22:38:22+00:00 Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics Ledman, Kristina 2019 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-75849 eng eng Umeå University Karlstad : CSD Karlstad Nordidactica : Journal of Humanities and Social Science Education, 2000-9879, 2019, 2019:3, s. 149-167 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CIVICS SOCIAL STUDIES CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION CRITICALITY CRITICAL THINKING CURRICULUM COMPARATIVE METHOD Didactics Didaktik Article in journal info:eu-repo/semantics/article text 2019 ftkarlstadsuniv 2024-12-18T14:19:58Z Criticality (the ability to think, self-reflect and act critically, as well as reason analytically) is framed as an important goal of education generally, and citizenship education specifically. However, literature and research within subject didactics tend to frame criticality as subject-specific, hence its conceptualisation can vary substantially depending on epistemological and research traditions. Thus, this paper compares its treatment in the same subject, civics, in curricula of the five Nordic countries. Civics is an interesting case as it is a major element of citizenship education, which varies somewhat among the five countries. Four ideal types of criticality are elaborated and deployed in the analysis: general, disciplinary, moral and ideological criticality. The results reveal substantial differences between the five compared curricula. They also reveal apparent correlations between civics as a single-subject construct (as in Denmark and Sweden) and disciplinary criticality, and between civics as an integrated curriculum construct (as in Iceland) and general criticality. Overall, the disciplinary view of criticality slightly prevails in the five compared curricula. The results raise questions about contextual factors’ effects on how criticality is constructed in school subjects, and helps reflection on what we actually refer to when we talk about a certain school subject. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Karlstad University: Publications (DIVA)
spellingShingle CIVICS
SOCIAL STUDIES
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
CRITICALITY
CRITICAL THINKING
CURRICULUM
COMPARATIVE METHOD
Didactics
Didaktik
Ledman, Kristina
Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title_full Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title_fullStr Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title_full_unstemmed Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title_short Discourses of criticality in Nordic countries’ school subject Civics
title_sort discourses of criticality in nordic countries’ school subject civics
topic CIVICS
SOCIAL STUDIES
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
CRITICALITY
CRITICAL THINKING
CURRICULUM
COMPARATIVE METHOD
Didactics
Didaktik
topic_facet CIVICS
SOCIAL STUDIES
CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION
CRITICALITY
CRITICAL THINKING
CURRICULUM
COMPARATIVE METHOD
Didactics
Didaktik
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-75849