Drama in Child Rights Education - Developing a Pedagogical Model

Marja-Liisa Hassi, H. Niemelä, Ari Paloniemi, Jouni Piekkari, Kaisa Wolde
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

1. IntroductionIn introducing the Global Education First (GEF) initiative in 2012, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon portrayed the necessary changes in the goals and methods of education for preparing students to face the future challenges of the global world.Schools have traditionally prepared people to pass exams, proceed to the next level, and graduate into the workplace. We now face the much greater challenge of raising global citizens... Education must fully assume its central role in helping people to forge more just, peaceful, tolerant, and inclusive societies. It must give people the understanding, skills, and values they need to cooperate in resolving the interconnected challenges of the 21st century (Education First, 2012, 20).In addition to knowledge and competence in different subject areas, students more than before need to be equipped with a will and an ability to collaborate with people reflecting various cultural backgrounds, life styles, and values. Students need to be prepared for global citizenship featured by active participation, collaboration, and reinforcement of human rights. This calls for increased attention and allocation of resources to the pedagogy of human rights education. Increased understanding, skills, and personal strength for sustaining and further strengthening peace, equity, and wellbeing are needed for a sustainable future. However, research indicates problems in implementing human rights education, and child rights education in particular. This calls for more knowledge about the pedagogy of human rights education.Learning and teaching about child rights are not systematically embedded in curricular frameworks and teachers are rarely familiar with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (DICE, 2010). For example, even though respondents in the recent international UNICEF baseline survey identified teacher training as the most important area for action, such as academic freedom and de-regulation of higher education seemed to refrain from achieving coherence in the area (Jerome, Emerson, Lundy, & Orr, 2015). On the other hand, opportunities for children's participation in decision-making in school were widespread but the number of schools and type of participation were mixed in most countries. Notably, child rights education was explicitly and consistently monitored only in a few countries.This paper report results from an action research project and study that aimed at testing and further development of a drama based model in child rights education. The study aim at clarifying teachers' and students' experiences and gains from the implementation of the model, exercises, and materials on child rights education developed by the the Finnish National Committee for UNICEF. The authors first outline a theoretical basis for human and child rights education, which is followed by an introduction of drama as a powerful pedagogical method of learning about, through, and for human rights. After this, we will focus on an action research and some results from a study that engaged regular secondary school teachers and their students in implementing the pedagogical model for child rights education.2. Human rights educationHuman rights education is informed by and consistent with The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948 but also with other international human rights agreements. In their definitions, researchers and agencies tend to lean on the UN Declaration on Human Rights Education and Training, which was the first official international definition of human rights education. It has been said to 'represent the current conception on the content of human rights education and training in the international law' (Kouros & Vainio 2014, 6). It lists three components of human rights education. First, education about human rights includes provision of knowledge and understanding of human rights norms and principles, the underpinning values and the mechanisms for the protection of human rights. …
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戏剧在儿童权利教育中的应用——发展一种教学模式
1. 2012年,联合国秘书长潘基文在介绍“全球教育优先”倡议时,提出了教育目标和方法的必要改变,以使学生准备好面对未来全球世界的挑战。传统上,学校让人们通过考试,进入下一个阶段,毕业后进入工作场所。我们现在面临着培养世界公民的更大挑战……教育必须充分发挥其核心作用,帮助人们建设更加公正、和平、宽容和包容的社会。它必须给人们理解,技能和价值观,他们需要合作解决21世纪的相互关联的挑战(教育第一,2012,20)。除了不同学科领域的知识和能力外,学生比以往更需要具备与不同文化背景、生活方式和价值观的人合作的意愿和能力。学生需要具备积极参与、合作和加强人权的全球公民意识。这就要求对人权教育的教学法给予更多的注意和分配更多的资源。要实现可持续的未来,就需要提高对维持和进一步加强和平、公平和福祉的理解、技能和个人力量。然而,研究表明,在实施人权教育,特别是儿童权利教育方面存在问题。这就要求更多地了解人权教育的教学法。关于儿童权利的学习和教学没有系统地嵌入到课程框架中,教师很少熟悉联合国儿童权利公约(DICE, 2010)。例如,尽管在最近的国际联合国儿童基金会基线调查中,受访者将教师培训确定为最重要的行动领域,如学术自由和高等教育放松管制,但似乎未能在该领域实现一致性(Jerome, Emerson, Lundy, & Orr, 2015)。另一方面,儿童在学校参与决策的机会很广泛,但在大多数国家,学校的数目和参与的类型参差不齐。值得注意的是,只有少数国家对儿童权利教育进行了明确和持续的监测。本文报告来自一个行动研究项目和研究,旨在测试和进一步发展基于戏剧的儿童权利教育模式。这项研究的目的是澄清教师和学生在执行儿童基金会芬兰全国委员会制定的儿童权利教育模式、练习和材料方面的经验和收获。作者首先概述了人权和儿童权利教育的理论基础,随后介绍了戏剧作为一种学习人权、通过人权和为人权而学习的有力教学方法。在此之后,我们将重点关注一项行动研究,以及一项让普通中学教师及其学生实施儿童权利教育教学模式的研究的一些结果。人权教育人权教育以1948年联合国大会通过的《世界人权宣言》为依据,并与之相一致,同时也与其他国际人权协定相一致。在他们的定义中,研究人员和机构倾向于依赖联合国人权教育和培训宣言,这是人权教育的第一个官方国际定义。它被认为“代表了当前国际法中人权教育和培训内容的概念”(Kouros & Vainio 2014, 6)。它列出了人权教育的三个组成部分。首先,人权教育包括提供对人权规范和原则、基本价值和保护人权机制的知识和理解。…
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