The Role of Intangible Heritage in Critical Citizenship Education: An Action Research Case Study with Student Primary Education Teachers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Critical Citizenship Education
1.2. Intangible Heritage, Citizen Participation, and Critical Citizenship Education
- To investigate the perceptions of primary education teachers about intangible heritage and its didactic potential in critical citizenship education.
- To analyse the changes and continuities in student teachers’ perceptions after carrying out a didactic project through relevant social problems linked to the Way of Saint James.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Case Study
2.2. Data Collection Techniques
2.3. Research Process
3. Results
3.1. Results of the Initial Perceptions of the Students
3.2. Results of the Final Perceptions of the Students
It seems logical to me, at first, because you can make an economic product more easily from material goods than from immaterial goods. For example, in an advertisement promoting tourism of a place or a community, for example, the language is not generally shown, the landscape, gastronomy, some traditions that are of interest are shown, but not the language;(S4, Q2)
If you watch the news on TV or open a textbook, they always talk about Galicia, in this case, about the Cathedral, a bit about The Way, but they almost never talk about traditional festivals or the language. That is why it is noted on the list of cultural interest assets.(FG3, S2, Q2)
Actually, I didn’t have much of an idea of what the intangible heritage of a place was, because it is something that is not disclosed either. So yes, our governments do not let us know how we are going to do it, to know, to value, to respect, and to disclose that in the end, it is very difficult if they do not educate us in them. If they do not give them to us to know, if they do not really give them importance, it is very difficult for citizens, of their own free will and without prior knowledge, to value it.(S1, P3)
The main one is as a tourist attraction, and indirectly an economic repercussion, maybe this year not because of the health crisis, but the Holy Year brings many more people. At an educational level, it is not given the importance that I think it should have, and we miss out on the potential benefits it could bring. My memory of the compulsory educational stage is that I never covered The Way, at least I don’t have that memory. We did cover the Cathedral of Santiago, but it is material, and the immaterial aspects of the entire Way are not developed.(FG3, S4, Q4)
At an educational level, my memory is also not having worked on it, but for example, this year in my internship there was a contest for schools from the area on the English Way and the children worked on it, each one had a question about the Cathedral and the Way, and they had to answer it and create a project and present it in class. It seems like it is given some importance, we know that we can use it, especially with the work we did, we know that we can teach and that it is very useful to learn about cultural assets such as the Way of Saint James.(FG2, S1, Q4)
At an economic level, it can be a point of income, but also the exploitation of the environment, of the landscape… must be noticed. I also speak from the perspective that I did the Way of Saint James and I saw the overcrowding in certain places, and there are many people who do not do The Way with the idealised image that we have, some people take the car, leave it at a stage, retrieve it later and then continue. This can have environmental implications, and, well, I saw people eating in a bar and throwing the plastic on the ground. There should be a shared civic responsibility to take care of The Way, but I observed that there is not. And then, at a local level, I would say a bit about the over-saturation that there could be in certain places and that the people who live in those places can feel overwhelmed by the crowds or things like that.(FG2, S3, Q5)
I’m going to give an absurd example. If in my house, say, the tortilla is made in one way and all of us in our house consider that this way is spectacular and that it must be recognised, in our house it will begin to be heritage and that’s it, without depending on what the government says.(FG1, S1, Q7)
I think it depends a bit on the generation. For example, maybe now we consider it heritage because that tortilla is incredible, but maybe in five generations it will lose value. Maybe for whatever reason it is not given so much importance. In our generation it was heritage, but no afterwards. I think so, heritagisation can be reversed for that reason, especially in this case.(FG1, S1, Q8)
What occurs to me is that, for a party it should be the people of that town who are responsible for organising it, bringing the food, setting up everything that has to do with the party and, in the end, also that they should be the ones spreading the word about the party. And ICTs can help a lot because you can reach a lot of people who don’t pass through the street where you have hung the poster, but you can hang it on many pages through advertisements, you can reach a lot more people from outside the town. The citizens of the town feel integrated, excited and they put more effort into it;(S3, Q10)
Associations can be created, which in turn generate valorisation projects and social networks and the media are a great tool to publicise assets of cultural interest, the state in which they are found and give them importance, with service-learning projects as well.(S2, Q10)
ICTs are essential, but they must coexist, that is, they cannot overshadow the importance that those people who have lived through this reality will always have. They are a tool, what they cannot [do], in my opinion, is take centre stage.(S5, Q10)
You must go back in time and think or try to understand why this has started to emerge. It has come this far, perfect, it’s very important now, but where does it come from? I believe that when you talk about heritage you must look for the origin, which is also why citizens can say what is heritage and what is not, yes, but with the knowledge of knowing what they are talking about.(S2, Q11)
The problem is that I don’t think it’s done enough, because the things that we were looking at, like, for example, toponyms and all these things, it’s something that until I got here and done this I had never ever considered whether it’s intangible heritage or if it must be preserved. The only thing, Galician language, it is true that in Galicia, from a young age, they do insist a lot that we must take care of the language, to prevent its loss.(S6, Q11)
As much as they try to educate in school to give importance to heritage, if at home they tell you totally different things, the opposite side of the coin, I think it is useless. I think it is essential that families and the school go in the same direction.(FG2, S4, Q11)
That you also must question yourself at certain times, question the story that they are telling us and corroborate if that information is true, because it is not enough to simply say well, it says here or I read here in this pamphlet, or on TV they say… You must have a bit of vision beyond what they are telling us.(S4, Q12)
Learn to value the heritage of our environment and not allow ourselves to be manipulated by the importance given to tangible heritage over the intangible, because it is an issue that is left aside, and many facets of it can come to disappear over the years. Students must be aware of this reality and promote solutions to these problems to revalue their identity.(FC, S89)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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QUESTIONS |
---|
1. What do you understand by cultural heritage? Give examples. 2. In Galicia there are 742 Assets of Cultural Interest declared by the Galician government, 11 are intangible (Data corresponding to the time of querying the database, https://abertos.xunta.gal/catalogo/cultura-ocio-deporte/-/dataset/0375/bens-interese-cultural-bic, accessed on 20 June 2021). What do you think? 3. How do citizens value cultural heritage? Do they do it the same way? Why? 4. What are the functions of the Way of Saint James? At a social, educational, economic, tourist level…? 5. Some groups consider that the Way of Saint James is becoming excessively commercialised. What is your opinion? 6. What are their benefits and harms? 7. Do you think that citizens can participate in heritagisation? How do they do that? Give examples. 8. Do you think they can reverse heritagisation? 9. In your opinion, how could citizens lead the visibility, conservation, valorisation, and transmission of the Galician intangible heritage? 10. How do you think ICTs can help to enhance the visibility, conservation, valorisation, and transmission of intangible cultural heritage? 11. What role do you give to heritage education in this process, both in formal and informal settings? 12. How do you consider that heritage education contributes to the formation of democratic, critical, and creative citizenship? |
Items | It’s Heritage (%) | It’s Not Heritage (%) | I Don’t Know (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Cathedral | 100 | 0 | 0 |
Park | 92.0 | 7.1 | 0.9 |
Landscape linked to the Way of Saint James | 91.2 | 5.3 | 3.5 |
Wine landscape | 88.5 | 8.8 | 2.7 |
Traditional festivity | 88.5 | 7.1 | 4.4 |
Galician language | 79.6 | 11.6 | 8.8 |
Traditional craft | 75.2 | 12.4 | 12.4 |
Galician toponyms | 67.3 | 17.7 | 15.0 |
Categories | Students (%) |
---|---|
Intangible elements | 85.2 |
Communities, groups, people | 27.6 |
Feeling of identity | 22.8 |
Intergenerational transmission | 21.5 |
History | 8.9 |
Environment and interaction with nature | 3.1 |
Cultural diversity and human rights | 0 |
Inherent tangible elements | 0 |
Agents | Students (%) |
---|---|
Citizens | 78.8 |
Galician Government | 65.5 |
School | 49.6 |
UNESCO | 46.9 |
Councils | 31.9 |
Civic/Cultural Associations | 28.3 |
Spanish Government | 26.9 |
Purpose | Result (%) | |
---|---|---|
A | To read reality so as not to be manipulated, so that what is said about history and society is questioned and one can build their own interpretation. | 21.2 |
B | To evaluate the present, how we have gotten here, the actions that have been done and the consequences. | 36.3 |
C | To understand who we are and how we are, so that we are aware of our identity. | 25.7 |
D | To know the sources of the past and the facts of the present, to recognise the historical and social models and their characteristics. | 16.8 |
Term | Result (%) |
---|---|
Preserving heritage | 33.9 |
Valuing heritage | 28.6 |
Respecting heritage | 26.8 |
Knowing your own identity | 19.6 |
Knowing the past | 16.1 |
Educating in values | 12.5 |
Ambiguous answer | 10.7 |
Being “good citizens” | 7.1 |
Do not find a relationship | 3.6 |
Critical citizenship | 2.7 |
Items | It’s Heritage (%) | It’s Not Heritage (%) | I Don’t Know (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Cathedral | 100 | 0 | 0 |
Park | 98.6 | 0.7 | 0.7 |
Landscape linked to the Way of Saint James | 99.3 | 0 | 0.7 |
Wine landscape | 93.2 | 5.4 | 1.4 |
Traditional festivity | 98.6 | 0.7 | 0.7 |
Galician language | 98 | 1.4 | 0.6 |
Traditional craft | 96.6 | 2 | 1.4 |
Galician toponyms | 97.3 | 1.4 | 1.3 |
Purpose | Initial (%) | Final (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
A | To read reality so as not to be manipulated, so that what is said about history and society is questioned and one can build their own interpretation. | 21.2 | 45.0 |
B | To evaluate the present, how we have gotten here, the actions that have been done, and the consequences. | 36.3 | 20.6 |
C | To understand who we are and how we are so that we are aware of our identity. | 25.7 | 23.1 |
D | To know the sources of the past and the facts of t the present and to recognise the historical and social models and their characteristics. | 16.8 | 11.3 |
Relationship between Heritage Education and Education for Citizenship | Purpose A | Purpose B | Purpose C | Purpose D | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Critical | 18 | 8 | 9 | 2 | 37 |
Uncritical | 54 | 25 | 28 | 16 | 123 |
Nº of students | 72 | 33 | 37 | 18 | 160 |
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Pérez-Guilarte, Y.; García-Morís, R. The Role of Intangible Heritage in Critical Citizenship Education: An Action Research Case Study with Student Primary Education Teachers. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13080801
Pérez-Guilarte Y, García-Morís R. The Role of Intangible Heritage in Critical Citizenship Education: An Action Research Case Study with Student Primary Education Teachers. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(8):801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13080801
Chicago/Turabian StylePérez-Guilarte, Yamilé, and Roberto García-Morís. 2023. "The Role of Intangible Heritage in Critical Citizenship Education: An Action Research Case Study with Student Primary Education Teachers" Education Sciences 13, no. 8: 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13080801
APA StylePérez-Guilarte, Y., & García-Morís, R. (2023). The Role of Intangible Heritage in Critical Citizenship Education: An Action Research Case Study with Student Primary Education Teachers. Education Sciences, 13(8), 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13080801