Critical Cosmopolitan Citizenship Education and the Ontario Curriculum

Authors

  • Taciana de Lira e Silva University of Ottawa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18192/jpds-sjpd.v2i1.2723

Keywords:

cosmopolitan citizenship education, critical pedagogy, empowerment, human rights, Ontario curriculum, ESL

Abstract

Critical cosmopolitan citizenship education is a transformational approach to education that empowers students to become global citizens through active involvement in the local, national and global communities while seeking to build a better world. This study’s objective was to inquire about how Ontario’s official curriculum guides educators to prepare secondary students (Canadian born and those new to Canada) to become effective citizens of the 21st century. A critical discourse analysis was conducted to investigate the Ontario Ministry of Education’s (OME) approach to citizenship education within the frameworks of critical pedagogy and cosmopolitan citizenship education that encourage educators and students to respect human rights and become active citizens who strive towards peace and sustainability. The discourse analysis included two curriculum documents: (1) The Ontario curriculum grades 9 and 10: Canadian and World Studies (OME, 2018), which addresses civic education, and (2) The Ontario Curriculum Grades 9 to 12: English as a Second Language and English Literacy Development (OME, 2007), which prepares newcomers to improve their English proficiency. The findings confirm that the discourse produced by these documents aims to develop students’ understanding of the global world, but does not necessarily prepare them to act for the betterment of the planet. The findings further indicate that citizenship education in the 21st century should dissociate from a nation-centered approach and focus on preparing students for global citizenry.

Author Biography

Taciana de Lira e Silva, University of Ottawa

Taciana de Lira e Silva is a doctoral student at Ottawa University in the field of Education, concentration in Societies, Languages and Cultures. She holds a M.Ed. in intercultural education, from Queen’s University, a M.S.T. from SUNY Potsdam, and a LL.D. from the Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (Brazil). She was an elementary Core French teacher for eight years and her teaching experience has led her to seek language teaching approaches that provide students with tools that will help them prepare to live in a diverse world. Her research interest is empowering L2 teachers through Critical Cosmopolitan Citizenship Education (Critical as in Critical Pedagogy).

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Published

2019-03-07