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Gesamtausgabe / Entire Issue. In: JSSE - Journal of Social Science Education. 18.10.2011
Inhalt
Birgit Weber
Testing and Diagnosing Social Science Literacy
Bettina Zurstrassen
A Sceptical Look at the Quantitative Education Research in Civic and Citizenship Education
Keywords
Introduction
1. The Problem of Particularism in Civic and Citizenship Education
1.1. Particular Subject Structure and curricular Particularism
1.2 Competing Programmatic Subject Concepts?
2. No Education-Theoretical and Empirically Proven, Internationally Adaptable Proficiency Model
2.1 The Dilemma of Domain Specific Diagnostics
What We Need to Do
3. Scientific Theoretical Problems of Interdisciplinary Civic and Citizenship Education Research
3.1 Various Scientific Disciplinary Terminology and Theory Concepts
What We Need to Do
4. Test Ethics in the Case of Quantitative Education Studies in the Field of Civic and Citizenship Education
4.1 Political Culture and Test Ethics
4.2 Social Structure and Test Ethics
4.2.1 Gender and Test Design
4.3 Political-Didactical Test Ethics
Necessitation of Oversimplified Political Judgements
Adoption of the Valuation Structure of the Test Designers
Definition Sovereignty over the Concept of the Politically Active Citizen
What We Need to Do
Conclusion
References
KimMarie McGoldrick, Janice L. Peterson
Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
Keywords
1. Introduction
2. Current Discussions of the Crisis and Implications for Teaching
3. A Framework for Expanding Current Pedagogic Practices
4. Using the Experience of Learning to Educate Students via the Human Dimension of Significant Learning
5. Experience, Human Dimension and Unemployment
5.1 Labor Economics Course
5.2 Statistics/Econometrics Course
6. Conclusion
References
Carolin Kölzer
Hauptschülers’ Conceptions of Work – An Exclusion from the Subjective Dissolution of Boundaries?
Keywords
1. The “Gap” between Changing Requirements and Hauptschülers’ Conceptions of Work
2. Structural Change and Changing Requirements
3. Pupils’ Conceptions – Some Kind of Cultural Capital
4. The View on Work
5. Résumé
References
Klaas Macha, Michael Schuhen
Framework of Measuring Economic Competencies
Keywords
1. Introduction
2. Classification Scheme for Knowledge or Competency Tests in the Area of Economic Education
Figure 1: Competency Octagon
3. Studies on Economic Knowledge and Literacy in the Light of the Dimension
3.1 Economic Knowledge of Young Adults in Baden-Württemberg (Germany)
3.2 Youth Study of the Federal Association of German Banks (Bundesverband deutscher Banken)
3.3 Test of Economic Literacy (TEL) and the Studies of NAPS
3.4 Competency Models for Vocational Education
Table 1: Measurement of Competence with Desirable Degree of Complexity
4. Siegen Model of Economic Competencies
5. Summary
References
Felix Fenske/Andreas Klee/Andreas Lutter
Concept-Cartoons as a Tool to Evoke and Analyze Pupils Judgments in Social Science Education
Keywords
1. Concepts in the Context of Judgments Learning Processes
1.1 Pupils’ Concepts in the Context of Judgments Learning Processes
1.2 Teachers’ Concepts in the Context of Judgments Learning Processes
2. Concept-Cartoons as an Approach to Pupils’ Social Science Conceptions and Misconceptions
Fig. 1
3. CCs in Social Science Education – Theoretical Assumptions
Fig. 2
Tab. 1
4. CCs in Social Science Education – Empirical Approximations
Fig. 3 Concept-Cartoon (Party ban)
Tab. 2
Tab. 3
4.1 Figure 1: Democratic Principles: Freedom of Speech as a Fundamental Cornerstone
4.2 Figure 2: Institutional Intervention: Bans as a Legitimate Political Instrument of Strong Democracies
4.3 Figure 3: Enlightenment through Education: The Strengthening of Democratic Subjects
5. Summary and Future Prospects
References
Andrea Szukala
Metaphors as a Tool for Diagnosing Beliefs about Teaching and Learning in Social Studies Teacher Education
Keywords
1. Introduction
2. Beliefs about Knowledge and about Teaching and Learning in Social Studies Education
2.1 Definitions
2.2 Two Research Positions in Epistemological Beliefs Research
2.3 Domain Generality and Domain Specificity of Epistemological Beliefs
Fig. 1 Multidimensional Ontogenetic Model of Domain-Specific Epistemological Beliefs (Greene et al. 2008)
2.4. Teacher Epistemological Beliefs in and Across Domains
3. Metaphors as a Theory and a Method for Analyzing Beliefs and Deeply Rooted Conceptualizations about Teaching and Learning
4. “Teaching Social Studies Reminds Me of Collecting Stamps…”: Using Metaphor Analysis for Exploring Student Teachers’ Beliefs in Social Studies Education (the BiSEd Project at the University of Bielefeld)
Fig. 2 Overview of the Survey
Fig. 3 Model for Analysing the Association of Domain Specific Epistemological Beliefs and Teaching and Learning Beliefs
Fig. 4 Alexander (Advanced Student): “Teaching Social Studies Reminds Me of Collecting Stamps…” (The Stamp Collection Metaphor)
5. Conclusions
Fig. 5 Strengths and Weaknesses of Metaphor Analysis as a Tool for Diagnosing Beliefs on Teaching and Learning in Social Studies Education
6. Annexes and References
Annex 1
Annex 2
References
Irena Zaleskene
Citizenship Education: Lithuanian Mapping
Keywords
Introduction
1. Role of Education and Main Goals for Civic Education
1.1 Some Remarks on Social Exclusion in Lithuania
1.2 Civic Education and Competencies
1.3 Concepts of Citizenship and the Changing Role of Civic Education
2. Current Status of Civic Education in Lithuania
2.1 Short History of Implementing Civic Education into National Curriculum.
2.2 The Ways of Organising Citizenship Education in Lithuania.
3. New Trends in the Development of Citizenship Education
3.1 Service Learning
3.2 Education for Consumer Citizenship.
4. Challenges for Civic Education and for Teacher Training
References
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