Abstract

This study investigates civic and citizenship education in a unique post-Communist context–in the bilingual education system of Estonia. Estonia continues to have a bilingual school system where there are Estonian and Russian language schools in parallel. While Estonian language school students are ranked very high in international comparisons, there is a significant difference between the achievement of Estonian and Russian language school students. We claim that this minority achievement gap in the performance of civic and citizenship knowledge is in addition to family background characteristics explained by behavioral and attitudinal factors that are moderated by the school language. Behavioral and attitudinal independent variables that we consider relevant in our analysis are classroom climate, trust in various media channels, and students’ beliefs in the influence of religion. We rely on hierarchical modeling to capture the embedded data and aim to explain how the different layers (school- and student level) interact and impact civic knowledge. We show that an open classroom is beneficial to students and part of the gap can be explained by Russian school students’ lower involvement in such practices. The strength of the belief in the influence of religion, on the contrary, is hurting students, despite that the negative effect is smaller for minority students there is a higher aggregate negative effect of it and therefore it also contributes to the minority achievement gap. Media trust indicators explain the gap marginally while the high trust of social media hurts students’ civic knowledge scores–still more Russian school students trust social media more than Estonian school students.

Highlights

  • Contemporary society is especially demanding in terms of both education in general and education for social and political participation in particular

  • Civic and citizenship education is provided as one of the general competences and as a separate subject in both language schools, and there are differences neither in curriculum nor the governance of these schools. This dichotomy poses the question of why students in schools with different languages of instruction score so differently despite a uniform national curriculum? We aim to show that after controlling for individual-level background characteristics the minority achievement gap in CCK in Estonia is, to a large extent, moderated by cultural-ideological factors such as perceived school climate, trust in different media channels, and the role of religiosity in everyday decisions that, first, have remarkable between-group differences in Russian and Estonian language schools; second, these cultural-ideological effects have specificities stemming from the school language

  • Our aim was to find out what is the explanation for the achievement gap (16.5% of total variance) between Estonian and Russian school students in Estonia

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary society is especially demanding in terms of both education in general and education for social and political participation in particular. This study aims to investigate the opportunities and challenges of civics and citizenship education to provide the knowledge and practices for political participation in the bilingual education system of Estonia. Põder and Lauri Large-scale Assess Educ (2021) 9:3 focusing on contextualised notions of citizenship studies and civic and citizenship education in unique post-Communist context, often under-represented in related scholars. In exploring whether students from different ethnic groups in linguistically divided school system experience the potential influencers of civic knowledge differently and how such differences relate to civic knowledge outcome would be an enhancement in this line. Measures of student religiosity and its associations with civic and citizenship education have remained mostly unexplored Measures of student religiosity and its associations with civic and citizenship education have remained mostly unexplored (ibid. 22)

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