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Search Results (192)

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Keywords = gender in the classroom

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16 pages, 1201 KB  
Article
Teachers’ Perceptions of Augmented Reality in Education: Between Pedagogical Potential and Technological Readiness
by João Piedade and Elisabete Batista
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(8), 1076; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081076 - 21 Aug 2025
Viewed by 404
Abstract
This study sought to investigate the perceptions of teachers from the Porto Metropolitan Area regarding the use of augmented reality (AR) in primary and secondary education. Drawing on a quantitative, descriptive, and correlational research design, data were collected through a validated questionnaire adapted [...] Read more.
This study sought to investigate the perceptions of teachers from the Porto Metropolitan Area regarding the use of augmented reality (AR) in primary and secondary education. Drawing on a quantitative, descriptive, and correlational research design, data were collected through a validated questionnaire adapted to the Portuguese context and administered to 116 teachers across different curricular subjects of primary and secondary education. The findings reveal overall positive perceptions of AR’s educational potential, particularly in its capacity to enhance teaching strategies and student engagement. Teachers with prior AR training and more frequent use of AR reported significantly higher levels of perceived benefit across dimensions such as teaching, learning, and inclusive practices. Notably, teachers’ perceptions of their own technological competence were lower, suggesting a gap between pedagogical appreciation and technical readiness. No significant differences were observed with respect to gender, age, or academic qualifications. This study highlights the importance of continuous training and professional development focused on both technical and pedagogical aspects to support the effective integration of AR into classrooms. These findings underscore the need for educational policies that promote equitable access to training, resources, and opportunities to experiment with AR, thereby fostering more inclusive and innovative learning environments. Full article
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20 pages, 426 KB  
Article
Exploring the Role of Teacher Self-Efficacy and Personal Environmental Practices in Integrating Sustainability into Teaching: A Network Analysis of German Teachers
by Martin Daumiller, Melanie V. Keller and Markus Dresel
Sustainability 2025, 17(16), 7533; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17167533 - 20 Aug 2025
Viewed by 502
Abstract
Integrating sustainability into school curricula is increasingly important, with teachers seen as key “change agents”. However, many lack specific preparation for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), and there is considerable variability in how explicitly or implicitly they address these topics in their teaching. [...] Read more.
Integrating sustainability into school curricula is increasingly important, with teachers seen as key “change agents”. However, many lack specific preparation for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), and there is considerable variability in how explicitly or implicitly they address these topics in their teaching. The purpose of this study was to investigate interpersonal and contextual factors related to ESD implementation, including self- and action-efficacy, personal attitudes, eco-anxiety, private engagement and knowledge, alongside perceived student interest and pressure, and school awareness. A total of 419 teachers from various German primary and secondary schools (M = 45 years, SD = 10.9; 68% female; teaching experience: M = 16 years, SD = 9.9) completed a cross-sectional online survey and knowledge test. Findings showed significant variation in how often teachers included sustainability in their teaching, unrelated to gender, school type, or training. Network analyses revealed that self-efficacy and private engagement—rather than teachers’ knowledge—were central predictors of ESD integration. Notably, private engagement emerged as a key bridge in the network, while high self-efficacy was closely tied to frequent classroom implementation. These results suggest that fostering teachers’ personal commitment and confidence may be more effective than focusing solely on knowledge to promote sustainability education. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Towards Sustainable Futures: Innovations in Education)
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13 pages, 282 KB  
Article
Professional Teaching Competence Perceived by Portuguese Students of Physical Activity and Sports Sciences in Gymnastic Disciplines
by M.ª Alejandra Ávalos-Ramos, Joel André Moura de Oliveira, Nuria Molina-García and Lilyan Vega-Ramírez
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(8), 1056; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081056 - 18 Aug 2025
Viewed by 334
Abstract
Adequate initial training should ensure that future physical activity and sports sciences (PASS) professionals acquire skills that include not only in-depth knowledge of the content to be taught but also an understanding of the most effective teaching strategies for its transmission. The objective [...] Read more.
Adequate initial training should ensure that future physical activity and sports sciences (PASS) professionals acquire skills that include not only in-depth knowledge of the content to be taught but also an understanding of the most effective teaching strategies for its transmission. The objective of this descriptive, exploratory, and quantitative study was to analyze the degree of acquisition of gymnastics teaching competencies of 107 future Portuguese PASS professionals, according to gender and training course. The research instrument was the Physical Education Teaching Competence Perception Scale, adapted to the gymnastics context. The main results showed that Portuguese students perceived themselves as having acquired medium levels of teaching competencies for gymnastics across all the dimensions analyzed, and feeling less competent in adapting curricular specifications. Regarding gender and training year, female students perceived themselves as more competent in the dimension related to the ability to use gymnastics content as teaching tools, with a significant difference. First-year students perceived a higher level of competence compared to their second- and third-year peers. Therefore, there is a need for more contextualized and reflective initial training, incorporating experiential learning modules that simulate real scenarios for adapting the gymnastics classroom. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exploring Teaching and Learning in Physical Education and Sport)
18 pages, 291 KB  
Article
Maps and Fabulations: On Transnationalism, Transformative Pedagogies, and Knowledge Production in Higher Education
by Ninutsa Nadirashvili and Katherine Wimpenny
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(8), 453; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14080453 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 449
Abstract
Higher education has long been subject to feminist critique, contesting traditional practices, with calls for transformative pedagogies that empower marginalised students, address social injustices and promote gender equality. Despite this, most classrooms in Western European universities remain largely unchanged, with educators facing the [...] Read more.
Higher education has long been subject to feminist critique, contesting traditional practices, with calls for transformative pedagogies that empower marginalised students, address social injustices and promote gender equality. Despite this, most classrooms in Western European universities remain largely unchanged, with educators facing the difficulty of imagining and/or enacting decolonial futures within their curricula. However, some progress has been made, particularly the inclusion of transnational scholarship in syllabi and a turn to transformative pedagogies, which allow for alternative ways of interdisciplinary knowing to enter academia. In this paper, we examine this coming together of approaches which promote dialogue and personal reflection to restructure discussions on equality, gender and knowledge production in the ‘classroom’. Using a creative critical account of feminist ethnography conducted at a Western European university, we present and discuss two illustrative vignettes about cultural mapping and critical fabulation, considering how dissonant voices have challenged Western concepts, exemplifying transformative pedagogy working in tandem with transnational thought. Key insights from the study identify approaches for facilitation of more open and richer discussions to reshape staff and student perspectives of gender, equality and knowledge production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gender Knowledges and Cultures of Equalities in Global Contexts)
20 pages, 4420 KB  
Article
Perception of Light Environment in University Classrooms Based on Parametric Optical Simulation and Virtual Reality Technology
by Zhenhua Xu, Jiaying Chang, Cong Han and Hao Wu
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2585; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152585 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 477
Abstract
University classrooms, core to higher education, have indoor light environments that directly affect students’ learning efficiency, visual health, and psychological states. This study integrates parametric optical simulation and virtual reality (VR) to explore light environment perception in ordinary university classrooms. Forty college students [...] Read more.
University classrooms, core to higher education, have indoor light environments that directly affect students’ learning efficiency, visual health, and psychological states. This study integrates parametric optical simulation and virtual reality (VR) to explore light environment perception in ordinary university classrooms. Forty college students (18–25 years, ~1:1 gender ratio) participated in real virtual comparative experiments. VR scenarios were optimized via real-time rendering and physical calibration. The results showed no significant differences in subjects’ perception evaluations between environments (p > 0.05), verifying virtual environments as effective experimental carriers. The analysis of eight virtual conditions (varying window-to-wall ratios and lighting methods) revealed that mixed lighting performed best in light perception, spatial perception, and overall evaluation. Light perception had the greatest influence on overall evaluation (0.905), with glare as the core factor (0.68); closure sense contributed most to spatial perception (0.45). Structural equation modeling showed that window-to-wall ratio and lighting power density positively correlated with subjective evaluations. Window-to-wall ratio had a 0.412 direct effect on spatial perception and a 0.84 total mediating effect (67.1% of total effect), exceeding the lighting power density’s 0.57 mediating effect sum. This study confirms mixed lighting and window-to-wall ratio optimization as keys to improving classroom light quality, providing an experimental paradigm and parameter basis for user-perception-oriented design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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16 pages, 398 KB  
Article
Bebras-Based Assessment for Computational Thinking: Performance and Gender Analysis
by Juan J. Santaengracia, Belén Palop, Trinidad García, Celestino Rodríguez Pérez and Luis J. Rodríguez-Muñiz
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(7), 899; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070899 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1281
Abstract
This study presents the design and validation process of a new Bebras-based instrument to assess computational thinking (CT) in 7th-grade students. An initial version of the test, composed of 18 multiple-choice items, was piloted with 80 students and revised based on their performance [...] Read more.
This study presents the design and validation process of a new Bebras-based instrument to assess computational thinking (CT) in 7th-grade students. An initial version of the test, composed of 18 multiple-choice items, was piloted with 80 students and revised based on their performance and classroom feedback. The final version, composed of 17 tasks balanced across CT components and difficulty levels, was administered to 1513 students from 86 Spanish schools. No significant gender differences were found in overall performance, supporting the potential of Bebras tasks to provide equitable assessment. An exploratory factor analysis revealed a dominant factor explaining 20% of the variance, and additional evidence (Lord’s index = 10.61) supported the use of a one-dimensional model despite the ambiguous dimensionality of the domain. BBACT offers a balanced and theoretically grounded tool for assessing CT in compulsory education and lays the foundation for future work exploring its validity and application across diverse contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Curriculum and Instruction)
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19 pages, 445 KB  
Systematic Review
Students’ Motivation for Classroom Music: A Systematic Literature Review
by Bernadett Kiss, Tun Zaw Oo, Fanni Biró and Krisztián Józsa
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(7), 862; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070862 - 4 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1479
Abstract
Music learning can provide students with significant emotional and educational benefits, including stress relief, increased confidence, self-expression, brain development, enhanced attention, and perseverance. Despite these advantages, many students perceive music lessons as less important and tend to pay less attention in music classrooms. [...] Read more.
Music learning can provide students with significant emotional and educational benefits, including stress relief, increased confidence, self-expression, brain development, enhanced attention, and perseverance. Despite these advantages, many students perceive music lessons as less important and tend to pay less attention in music classrooms. Consequently, motivation plays a crucial role for both teachers and students in facilitating an effective teaching and learning process in music education. Although motivation is generally understood as a student’s desire to engage in the learning process, it remains a complex concept that researchers and educators continue to explore across various educational contexts. This study aimed to review students’ motivation for classroom music by analyzing research from different studies in music education. Following the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines, 27 studies were reviewed and included. The findings identified four theoretical constructs related to motivation in classroom music: expectancy–value theory, self-determination theory, mastery motivation, and achievement goal theory. Among these, the first two were most commonly discussed across the reviewed studies. All the reviewed studies employed self-reported questionnaires as their primary assessment tools. Most studies indicated that girls demonstrated higher motivation levels than boys in music classrooms. Additionally, the findings emphasized that teachers’ instructional strategies are critical for enhancing students’ motivation. This study contributes to the field of music education by highlighting the pivotal role of teacher strategies in fostering motivation and by providing a comprehensive review of motivational theories, assessment tools, and gender-related motivational differences in music education. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Contemporary Issues in Music Education: International Perspectives)
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14 pages, 382 KB  
Article
Gender Differences in Classroom Sympathy and Antipathy: A Digital Sociometric Study
by Eliacim Mella-Defranchi and Roberto Araya
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(7), 830; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070830 - 1 Jul 2025
Viewed by 439
Abstract
Socioemotional relationships significantly influence students’ learning, development, and school well-being. This study explored gender differences in sympathy and antipathy based on data originally gathered via a digital platform primarily designed for mathematical learning. The platform administered a sociometric test to a large sample [...] Read more.
Socioemotional relationships significantly influence students’ learning, development, and school well-being. This study explored gender differences in sympathy and antipathy based on data originally gathered via a digital platform primarily designed for mathematical learning. The platform administered a sociometric test to a large sample (3090 of fourth-grade students (mean age = 10.19 years, 47.7% girls) in the Chilean Metropolitan Region. Teachers facilitated the test, allowing students to nominate peers they liked and disliked. The study confirmed a trend of homophily in sympathy, with students preferring same-gender peers. It also revealed a gender disparity in antipathy: girls nominated an average of 5.27 disliked classmates (SD = 7.20), 1.45 more nominations than boys, with a Cohen’s d of 0.22. These findings provide insights to enhance school climate and address the mental health implications of social exclusion, considering gender differences. These results underscore the potential of scalable digital tools to support educators in monitoring peer dynamics and fostering inclusive, emotionally supportive school environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue School Well-Being in the Digital Era)
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32 pages, 3349 KB  
Article
The PECC Framework: Promoting Gender Sensitivity and Gender Equality in Computer Science Education
by Bernadette Spieler and Carina Girvan
Computers 2025, 14(7), 249; https://doi.org/10.3390/computers14070249 - 25 Jun 2025
Viewed by 793
Abstract
There are increasing expectations that we should live in a digitally and computationally literate society. For many young people, particularly girls, school is the one place that provides an opportunity to develop the necessary knowledge and skills. This environment can either perpetuate and [...] Read more.
There are increasing expectations that we should live in a digitally and computationally literate society. For many young people, particularly girls, school is the one place that provides an opportunity to develop the necessary knowledge and skills. This environment can either perpetuate and reinforce or eliminate existing gender inequalities. In this article, we present the “PLAYING, ENGAGEMENT, CREATVITIY, CREATING” (PECC) Framework, a practical guide to supporting teachers in the design of gender-sensitive learning activities, bringing students’ own interests to the fore. Through a six-year, mixed-methods, design-based research approach, PECC—along with supporting resources and digital tools—was developed through iterative cycles of theoretical analysis, empirical data (both qualitative and quantitative), critical reflection, and case study research. Exploratory and instrumental case studies investigated the promise and limitations of the emerging framework, involving 43 teachers and 1453 students in secondary-school classrooms (including online during COVID-19) in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Quantitative data (e.g., surveys, usage metrics) and qualitative findings (e.g., interviews, observations, classroom artefacts) were analyzed across the case studies to inform successive refinements of the framework. The case study results are presented alongside the theoretically informed discussions and practical considerations that informed each stage of PECC. PECC has had a real-world, tangible impact at a national level. It provides an essential link between research and practice, offering a theoretically informed and empirically evidenced framework for teachers and policy makers. Full article
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22 pages, 585 KB  
Review
Gender, Ethnicity and Teaching Competencies: Do They Influence Intercultural Communicative Competence in Teacher Education?
by Marjorie Tovar-Correal and Liliana Pedraja-Rejas
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(5), 520; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15050520 - 23 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1354
Abstract
Globalization has transformed classrooms into culturally diverse environments, highlighting the critical need to prepare future teachers with skills to address these complexities. This study explores Intercultural Communicative Competence (ICC) as a fundamental skill in initial teacher training (ITT), aligning with Sustainable Development Goal [...] Read more.
Globalization has transformed classrooms into culturally diverse environments, highlighting the critical need to prepare future teachers with skills to address these complexities. This study explores Intercultural Communicative Competence (ICC) as a fundamental skill in initial teacher training (ITT), aligning with Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) No. 4, which promotes inclusive, equitable and quality education. Through a narrative literature review, this research analyzes the main definitions and theoretical models of ICC, examining their relationship to gender, ethnicity and the teaching competencies of the faculty member. The findings highlight the lack of a unified consensus in the conceptualization of ICC, reflecting its dynamic and interdisciplinary nature. The results indicate that while gender does not significantly influence the development of ICC, ethnicity and migrant background are linked to a greater willingness to acquire it. In addition, the reflective and specialized training of the faculty member emerges as a decisive factor in the promotion of the ICC. These findings underscore the need to integrate ICC into initial teacher education plans to better prepare future teachers in multicultural contexts. By addressing equity and cultural diversity, the ICC supports educators in promoting respectful, effective and inclusive interactions, ultimately contributing to the achievement of SDG No. 4. This study enriches the discourse on teacher education and intercultural education by offering practical perspectives for connecting theory with practice in diverse educational contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Interculturality and Policy Studies for Higher Education)
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14 pages, 1954 KB  
Article
Exploring the Associations Between School Climate and Mental Wellbeing: Insights from the MOVE12 Pilot Study in Norwegian Secondary Schools
by Karoline Gulbrandsen Hansen and Svein Barene
Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2025, 15(4), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe15040046 - 26 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1864
Abstract
This study examined the association between school climate, defined by social and academic environments, and mental wellbeing among 446 first-year upper-secondary students in eastern Norway (ISRCTN10405415). As part of the MOVE12 pilot study conducted in February 2023, a cross-sectional online questionnaire targeted approximately [...] Read more.
This study examined the association between school climate, defined by social and academic environments, and mental wellbeing among 446 first-year upper-secondary students in eastern Norway (ISRCTN10405415). As part of the MOVE12 pilot study conducted in February 2023, a cross-sectional online questionnaire targeted approximately 600 students from five schools offering diverse academic and vocational tracks. Mental wellbeing was assessed using the Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (SWEMWBS, scale 7–35), and the data were analyzed with stepwise multiple linear regression. The mean mental wellbeing score was 24.5 ± 4.3, with significant gender differences (p < 0.05) but no variations between academic and vocational tracks. Self-efficacy was the strongest predictor of mental wellbeing (b = 0.236, p < 0.001), followed by health satisfaction (b = 0.179, p < 0.001), time spent with friends (b = 0.163, p < 0.001), social isolation (b = −0.162, p = 0.001), wellbeing in physical education (b = 0.129, p = 0.002), and classroom climate (b = 0.128, p = 0.007). These findings emphasize the critical role of self-efficacy, peer connections, and supportive classroom climates in promoting mental wellbeing. Addressing these elements of school climate can significantly enhance the mental health and overall outcomes of upper-secondary students. Full article
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23 pages, 597 KB  
Article
“Okay We’re Doing My Idea”: How Students Enact Epistemic Agency and Power in a Design-Based Engineering Context
by Christina L. Baze, María González-Howard, Victor Sampson, Richard Crawford and Xiaofen Hamilton
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(4), 402; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15040402 - 23 Mar 2025
Viewed by 917
Abstract
Science and engineering practices are intended to engage students authentically in the work that scientists and engineers do in order to provide opportunities for meaningful engagement in disciplinary work, including design-based learning. Meaningful engagement, particularly for sensemaking purposes, requires a shift in who [...] Read more.
Science and engineering practices are intended to engage students authentically in the work that scientists and engineers do in order to provide opportunities for meaningful engagement in disciplinary work, including design-based learning. Meaningful engagement, particularly for sensemaking purposes, requires a shift in who is leading the classroom community’s intellectual work, from the teacher to the students. When students are positioned with the intellectual responsibility of producing and evaluating ideas, there is potential for them to act with epistemic agency. Enacting epistemic agency involves socially negotiated framing and power dynamics. The purpose of this study is to determine the ways in which gendered power dynamics influence the negotiation of epistemic agency in a design-based learning context. Using a qualitative case study methodology, student negotiations of epistemic and positional framing from a mixed-gender group were observed. Transcripts from their discourse during two design challenges were mapped, and focal group interviews were holistically analyzed to understand students’ perceptions and navigation of epistemic and positional framings in a design-based learning context and to understand how power dynamics influence these negotiations. Students understood the epistemic goals of the design challenges to involve designing solutions to real-world problems. During the first challenge, the group distributed positions of epistemic authority among the members. However, the group experienced a change in composition, resulting in changed power dynamics and epistemic oppression. These findings have implications regarding the critical impact that classroom culture and interactional practices might have on students’ epistemic agency, especially considering their multiple identity markers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancing Science Learning through Design-Based Learning)
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9 pages, 158 KB  
Article
Through the Lens of Kara Walker’s Artwork: Exploring Race, Identity, and Intersectionality in Higher Education
by Veronica Bremer
Genealogy 2025, 9(1), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9010024 - 4 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1284
Abstract
Kara Walker’s art, known for its stark depictions of race, history, and power dynamics, offers an invaluable entry point for discussing race in higher education. Integrating Walker’s work into the humanities classroom allows for critical engagement with historical and contemporary issues of race, [...] Read more.
Kara Walker’s art, known for its stark depictions of race, history, and power dynamics, offers an invaluable entry point for discussing race in higher education. Integrating Walker’s work into the humanities classroom allows for critical engagement with historical and contemporary issues of race, ethnicity, and systemic oppression. Through her use of silhouettes and narratives that expose the brutal legacies of slavery, racism, and colonialism, Walker’s art challenges students to confront uncomfortable truths and foster deeper conversations about intersectionality. Discussing Walker’s art can lead to explorations of how race intersects with class, gender, sexuality, and disability, revealing the layered and compounded experiences of marginalized groups. Through the flipped classroom approach, students were introduced to Kara Walker’s work outside of class through assigned readings and materials. During class time, discussions were facilitated by students themselves, enhancing peer-to-peer learning. The session was led by a pupil responsible for elaborating on Walker’s work and guiding the discussion. In-class time was dedicated to small-group discussions where students critically engaged with the themes in Walker’s art. These groups provided space for more intimate, reflective conversations. After small-group discussions, insights were shared in a larger panel discussion format. This allowed students to synthesize ideas, compare perspectives, and engage with a wider range of interpretations of Walker’s art. By engaging with Walker’s work, students develop a more nuanced understanding of oppression and social justice, making her art a powerful tool for transformative education. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Tackling Race Inequality in Higher Education)
20 pages, 2351 KB  
Article
Building Community Among K-8 Teachers Through a University-Educator Network Partnership
by Audrey Lucero and Janette D. Avelar
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(3), 268; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15030268 - 21 Feb 2025
Viewed by 696
Abstract
At this time of national divisiveness in the U.S., it is more important than ever for youth to have teachers who can facilitate critical conversations about race, immigration, gender, and other fraught issues in their classrooms. In this article, we detail how an [...] Read more.
At this time of national divisiveness in the U.S., it is more important than ever for youth to have teachers who can facilitate critical conversations about race, immigration, gender, and other fraught issues in their classrooms. In this article, we detail how an innovative partnership among key education stakeholders in the state of Oregon fostered a sense of community and continued learning for kindergarten through eighth grade teachers to address these issues. We did so by developing and facilitating a professional development (PD) sequence focused on anti-racist critical literacy. More than 125 educators from 24 districts around the state participated in the sequence between 2021 and 2024. We begin by situating this work in the literature, then providing an overview of the partnership. Finally, we share the perspectives of 19 educators who spoke in interviews about their experience of the PD. We offer this as an example of how colleges of education can establish and nurture partnerships with other stakeholders to ensure that teachers feel supported in their efforts to further social justice, especially for those who lack community or administrative “backup”, as is the case for many educators in rural parts of the U.S. Full article
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17 pages, 1072 KB  
Article
Educating for Diversity: Intercultural and Inter-Religious Sensitivity in Early Childhood and Primary School Teachers in Training at the University of Barcelona
by Carolina Quirós Domínguez, Valeria De Ormaechea Otarola, Mónica Ferré Tobaruela and Núria Lorenzo Ramírez
Religions 2025, 16(2), 238; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020238 - 14 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1223
Abstract
This study analyses the development of intercultural and interreligious sensitivity in pre-service teachers on the Early Childhood and Primary Education degrees at the University of Barcelona. Using a mixed approach, the research combines the collection and analysis of quantitative data on a validated [...] Read more.
This study analyses the development of intercultural and interreligious sensitivity in pre-service teachers on the Early Childhood and Primary Education degrees at the University of Barcelona. Using a mixed approach, the research combines the collection and analysis of quantitative data on a validated self-perception scale and the qualitative perspective of a reflective activity inspired by Deardorff’s storytelling circles. In its quantitative phase, the study involved 290 students, and the results showed medium to elevated levels of self-perceived sensitivity, influenced by factors such as gender and previous intercultural experiences. The qualitative phase involved 84 pre-service teachers and consisted of the shared analysis of a short film on discrimination, highlighting the participants’ capacity for critical reflection and their ability to engage in meaningful dialogue about diversity and inclusion. These results emphasize the importance of integrating intercultural and interreligious training into teaching programmes to prepare future educators for the challenges of increasingly diverse classrooms. The study highlights the transformative role of educators as agents of change in promoting inclusive school environments and highlights the need for innovative pedagogical approaches to develop these competencies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Religions and Health/Psychology/Social Sciences)
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