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Embodied Civic Education: The Corporeality of a Civil Body Politic

文章作者:公民教育研究中心 访问次数:
Embodied Civic Education: The Corporeality of a Civil Body Politic
 
Phillips, Donna Paoletti
Journal of Pedagogy, v5 n1 p90-114 Jun 2014
This study explores the lived experience of democratic civic education for middle school students. Grounded in the tradition of hermeneutic phenomenology as guided by Heidegger (1962), Gadamer (1960/2003), Casey (1993), and Levinas (1961/2004), among others, the framework for conducting action-sensitive research, as described by van Manen (2003), guides this inquiry as I endeavor to uncover what it means for students to embody civic education. Twenty-nine students are taped engaging in discussions, debates, simulations, and other civic education. Twelve students self-select to engage in reflective writing and conversations about their experiences. The existential theme of lived body emerges from this inquiry. The importance of embodying one's learning, as well as connecting physically and socially to one's society are apparent. The students' learning through their corporeal experience serves to create the "civil body politic" of the classroom and inform their behavior outside of the classroom. Insights from this study may inform curriculum theorists and developers, policy-makers, and classroom teachers. Recommendations are made to transform the social studies for students to capitalize on their bodily experiences within the classroom so that they may grow in their role as a citizen. Students may then embody the ideals essential in civic education and democratic societies
Descriptors: Civics, Citizenship Education, Democracy, Middle School Students, Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, Social Studies, Action Research, Student Attitudes, Discourse Analysis, Reflection, Student Experience, Learner Engagement, Human Body, Experiential Learning
Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research