Abstract

In this paper we examine the extent to which the Australian Curriculum for Civics and Citizenship Education provides opportunities to educate young people to be active, critical citizens, capable of ethical decision-making and democratic participation in their own communities and nations and in the wider world. We ask whether, if the formal curriculum is implemented, will it enable young Australians to be active citizens and participants in the twenty-first century as local and global citizens, whose learning goes beyond national education, to encompass current realities and issues of global interdependency that will impact on their future lives. This conceptual paper examines theories relevant to the development of active, critical and participatory citizenship. It discursively analyses the extent to which the Australian Curriculum offers a framework for the development of participatory citizens, prepared for uncertain futures, in a global world. While the various dimensions of the curriculum do include elements of ‘national education’, there are opportunities to frame the civil, political and social components of citizenship in ways that include local, national and global understandings. However, a review of the curriculum indicates that the knowledge and skills lack participative opportunities for social action. Civics and citizenship knowledge and skills can be developed if all elements of the curriculum are implemented in school classrooms. The achievement of active citizenship, however, also requires students’ participation in whole school programs and contemporary concerns, through authentic actions relevant to their own lives.

Highlights

  • In recent decades in Australia, as in many other parts of the world, there has been considerable interest in the purpose, scope and pedagogies for civics and citizenship education (CCE) and involving young people in democratic and participatory citizenship (United Nations, 2012; Henderson & Tudball, 2016; Tawil, 2013)

  • We ask if the formal curriculum is implemented, will it enable young Australians to be active citizens and participants in the 21st century as local and global citizens, whose learning goes beyond national education, to encompass current realities and issues of global interdependency that will impact on their future lives?

  • It could be argued that the reemergence of the One Nation Party in Australia on an anti-Muslim platform reflects similar moves to more neo-conservative politics in Europe, in response to the increased number of refugees seeking shelter and safer lives there. Such issues and events can only be understood by young people if they have the opportunity to experience robust civics and citizenship learning that includes a focus on contemporary issues and their contexts, so they can function as informed, active citizens of the polity at local, state, national and global levels in an increasingly interconnected world. We argue that this requires multiple dimensions of knowledge and understanding (Cogan & Derricott, 2000) that goes beyond traditional conceptions of civics and citizenship education and speaks directly to the challenges of the 21st century in a multinational context

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Summary

Methods

This conceptual paper examines theories relevant to the development of active, critical and participatory citizenship. It discursively analyses the extent to which the Australian Curriculum offers a framework for the development of participatory citizens, prepared for uncertain futures, in a global world

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