Project summary

Project summary

  • January 2018 to March 2019

The project was inspired by UNESCO guidance on global citizenship education and the International Youth White Paper on Global Citizenship, which call for stronger critical attention to unpacking mainstream assumptions and centring marginalised perspectives.

It explored barriers and enabling factors experienced by teachers in addressing complex relationships between environmental, economic, and social issues in their teaching.

Through workshops in England, Finland and Sweden exploring the HEADS UP tool (Andreotti, 2012) and its classroom application, the project aimed to connect decolonial theory with classroom experience in Europe. In so doing, it aimed to support secondary and upper secondary teachers to explore difficult questions about the profound inequalities at the heart of unsustainable development.

Research findings

The Teaching for Sustainable Development Through Ethical Global Issues Pedagogy Report finds teachers are eager and willing to take a more critical approach to the teaching of global issues. Further, they find their students appreciate being challenged by complex ideas and deeply engaging in ethical considerations around global issues.

A thematic analysis of the data identified three key findings:

  • teachers are both enabled and constrained by curriculum, and many find strategic ways to take a critical approach
  • teachers see the role of colonialism in global issues as both important to acknowledge and challenging in practice, and they could use further support and resourcing
  • teachers face an overwhelming number of relevant materials and want resources that can be adapted to current teaching in order to deepen engagement

Collaboratively produced teacher resource

A resource to support deepening and complexifying the treatment of global issues in secondary classrooms through adapting the HEADS UP tool was drafted and piloted with participants.

It has been used by participants and the researchers to support continuing professional development in their own communities as well as in other countries in Europe and in North America. Supporting teachers’ existing practice, it focuses on:

  • supporting teachers to critically reflect on their own views while preparing lessons
  • guiding students to identify and de-centre mainstream perspectives and consider marginalised perspectives
  • adding complexity to exploring any global issues topic
  • breaking down global issues and identifying the challenges
  • debriefing any actions and responses following the lessons

Downloadable teacher resources

Research outputs

Academic papers

Research reports

5,000
More than 5,000 classrooms in the UK have access to the teacher resource.
5,000
More than 5,000 classrooms in the UK have access to the teacher resource.
1,800
Building from a primary school pilot, over 1,800 schools teaching 3–12 year olds will have access to the teaching resource as part of an international education programme. Teachers from England, Finland and Sweden have presented the resource at international and national teacher conferences to a very positive reception.
1,800
Building from a primary school pilot, over 1,800 schools teaching 3–12 year olds will have access to the teaching resource as part of an international education programme. Teachers from England, Finland and Sweden have presented the resource at international and national teacher conferences to a very positive reception.

Funding

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