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Positioning Pedagogy - a matter of children's rights?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2016
Date Available
2017-12-27T02:00:10Z
Abstract
This paper foregrounds pedagogy in the realisation of children's rights to nondiscrimination and serving their best interests, as articulated in the UNCRC. Drawing on a mixed methodological study of teachers in 12 schools it does so through exploring teacher pedagogies in terms of how they 'think', 'do' and 'talk' pedagogy, conceived as their pedagogic 'habitus'. Findings confirm contradictions between teachers’ ideals and their practice that is significantly mediated by the socio-cultural context of their schools, gender and presence of migrant children. Especially striking is that neither social justice concerns nor children’s rights explicitly emerge in their narratives, in turn influencing how they 'do' pedagogy with different groups of children. This contradiction is understood as a dialectical process of re/action influenced by structures, policies and the exercise of power in local contexts. The UNCRC provides a generative mechanism within which to hold government to account for the impact of policies, especially in challenging contexts. To be realised in practice, however, it also needs to be embedded in teacher habitus, shaping their dispositions toward children’s rights to non-discrimination and serving their best interests in education.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Journal
Oxford Review of Education
Volume
42
Issue
4
Start Page
424
End Page
443
Copyright (Published Version)
2016 Informa UK Limited
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Positioning_Pedagogy_¿_realizing_children¿s_rights_to_socially_just_education.pdf
Size
347.04 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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