Who Needs Global Citizenship Education? A Review of the Literature on Teacher Education

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Who Needs Global Citizenship Education? A Review of the Literature on Teacher Education
Abstract
Given the seemingly ever-increasing scholarly production about the ideas and ideals of global citizenship education (GCE), it is not surprising those discussions started to gain influence in teacher education (TE) debates. In this study, we examine the discourses that tacitly shape the meanings of GCE within the contemporary academic literature on TE. After analyzing the peer-reviewed scholarship published from 2003 to 2018, we identified patterns in how GCE for TE was described and defended, beyond the differences in their conceptual frameworks. The dominant trend found is to frame GCE as a redemptive educational solution to global problems. This framing requires teachers to embrace a redemptive narrative following a model of rationality based on altruistic, hyperrationalized and overly romanticized ideals. Ultimately, TE literature contributes to the configuration of an excessively naïve discourse that tends to ignore the neoliberal context in which both GCE and TE take place today.
Publication
Journal of Teacher Education
Volume
72
Issue
2
Pages
223-236
Date
2021-03-01
Journal Abbr
Journal of Teacher Education
Language
en
ISSN
0022-4871
Short Title
Who Needs Global Citizenship Education?
Accessed
05/04/2022, 20:16
Library Catalogue
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc
Citation
Estellés, M., & Fischman, G. E. (2021). Who Needs Global Citizenship Education? A Review of the Literature on Teacher Education. Journal of Teacher Education, 72(2), 223–236. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022487120920254