Exploring Social Justice Education as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy to Promote Justice-Oriented Citizenship
Abstract
:“There is no such thing as a neutral educational process. Education either functions as an instrument that is used to facilitate the integration of the younger generation into the logic of the present system and bring about conformity to it, or it becomes ‘the practice of freedom,’ the means by which [people] deal critically and creatively with reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world.”[1].
1. Introduction
- What initial perceptions of good citizenship are evident in middle school student drawings of “good citizenship” prior to participation in an SJ project?
- What shifts, if any, are evident in student perceptions of good citizenship after participation in an SJ project?
- To what extent do student drawings demonstrate critical consciousness before and after participation in an SJ project?
2. Perspectives
2.1. Social Justice Education (SJE) as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy
Social justice education does not merely examine differences or diversity but pays careful attention to the systems of power and privilege that give rise to social inequality and encourages students to critically examine oppression on institutional, cultural, and individual levels in search of opportunities for social action in the service of social change.
- Through its focus on active, authentic learning and the development of criticality, SJE directly addresses the recommended essential attributes of successful middle schools, which include educational approaches that are responsive, challenging, empowering, equitable, and engaging [2].
SJE aims to support the development of critically conscious and empowered humans who strive to create a more socially just society. With this goal in mind, SJE engages learners in an authentic action-oriented inquiry regarding topics such as identity, diversity, justice, social movements, power, equity, privilege, oppression, and critical action.
2.2. Student Conceptions of Citizenship
3. Research Methods
3.1. Context
3.2. The SJ Project
3.3. Positionality, Data Collection, and Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Pre-Project Perceptions of Citizenship
4.1.1. Good Citizens Are Helpers
4.1.2. Good Citizens Follow Rules, Laws, and Societal Expectations
4.1.3. Good Citizens Disrupt Injustice by Speaking up for Others
4.1.4. Good Citizens Are Inclusive and Kind to All, Regardless of Differences
4.1.5. Good Citizens Take Action to Create Justice-Oriented Change
4.1.6. Evidence of Critical Consciousness Pre-Project
4.2. Post-Project Shifts in Perceptions of Good Citizenship
4.2.1. Good Citizens Take Action to Create Justice-Oriented Change
I added an inequitable [sic] situation with someone thinking they could fix it. I changed this because this project has changed my outlook on what being a good citizen is, because a good citizen does not just think that it is wrong; they think how to fix the problem.
- Both of these examples illustrate the realization post-project that good citizenship requires not only noticing injustice and helping individuals who are experiencing it, but also seeking to change the social circumstances that make injustice possible.
4.2.2. Good Citizens Work Together to Make the Community Better
4.2.3. Good Citizens Sometimes Have to Defy Norms for Justice
4.2.4. Sub-Patterns in Shifts
I changed the message from following the law to making a change for HMGs [HMGs were the acronyms used in class for historically marginalized groups]. because following the law seldom makes a significant social change. I changed the term “good citizen” from standing still to marching because standing idle does not create change and justice.
4.2.5. Evidence of Critical Consciousness Post-Project
5. Discussion and Implications
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Social Justice Project Stages |
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Example Lessons |
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Example Student Questions |
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Examples of Student-Organized Social Action |
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Themes in Student Perceptions of Good Citizenship | Examples |
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Good citizens are helpers. | Helping other individuals (ex. helping someone up who fell, picking up a dropped wallet, helping someone cross the street) Helping their community (ex. picking up trash, gardening) |
Good citizens are inclusive and kind to all regardless of differences. | Statements such as “Respect everyone equally”, “Invite everyone even if they don’t look like you”, and “Be kind to everyone even if they look different”. |
Good citizens follow rules, laws, and expectations. | Following rules, laws, and other societal expectations such as working hard, taking care of your property, and voting. For example: “Good citizens follow the law when it is seemingly unimportant or if no one is watching. Because it’s the right thing to do”. |
Good citizens disrupt injustice by speaking up for others | Pictures of bystanders speaking up when someone is being bullied or someone uses racist or oppressive language. Example caption: “The citizen is calling [some]one out for saying something racist and the other one is taking his/her advice”. |
Good citizens take action to make justice-oriented change | “A good citizen doesn’t just think that it is wrong, they think how to fix the problem”. “I changed the ‘good citizen’ from standing still to marching because standing idle does not create change and justice” |
Good citizens work together to solve problems. | Changes in pictures from depicting one person to showing multiple people working together to accomplish a goal. “I drew people holding hands because people need to work together and help people who are in need”. |
Good citizens sometimes have to defy norms for justice. | “I changed from following [the] law to making change for marginalized groups because following the law seldom makes significant social change”. “I got rid of the follow the law and don’t cause trouble because being a good citizen is not about being happy where you are or lying low. It is about helping other citizens and you cannot do that always by staying quiet”. |
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Share and Cite
DeMink-Carthew, J.; DeMink, J.W.; Smith, K.W. Exploring Social Justice Education as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy to Promote Justice-Oriented Citizenship. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 852. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090852
DeMink-Carthew J, DeMink JW, Smith KW. Exploring Social Justice Education as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy to Promote Justice-Oriented Citizenship. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(9):852. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090852
Chicago/Turabian StyleDeMink-Carthew, Jessica, Jeremy W. DeMink, and Kristie W. Smith. 2023. "Exploring Social Justice Education as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy to Promote Justice-Oriented Citizenship" Education Sciences 13, no. 9: 852. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090852
APA StyleDeMink-Carthew, J., DeMink, J. W., & Smith, K. W. (2023). Exploring Social Justice Education as a Responsive Middle Grades Pedagogy to Promote Justice-Oriented Citizenship. Education Sciences, 13(9), 852. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090852