Education For Citizenship In The Caribbean
Abstract
This study aims to describe teacher training and curricular policy for
the primary and secondary levels in relation to education for citizen ship in Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic and make practical
recommendations for improvements in the quality of design and
implementation of these initiatives in the three countries.
THE FOLLOWING ARE SOME OF THE CONCLUSIONS:
At the start of the twenty-first century, Cuba, the Dominican
Republic and Haiti share a context in which the processes of
democratization have encountered obstacles connected with
their colonial heritage, the hegemony of the European nations
and the influence and direct interference from United States geo political, economic and cultural power.
These democracies have developed from long and violent political
dictatorships, which established authoritarian and restrictive institu tional mechanisms for the day-to-day administration of public affairs.
Public policies on education for citizenship should therefore take
account of the contradictions faced by the democratizing processes
and of the complex cultural impact on the development of social
identities brought about by the phenomenon of mass migration.
These issues and the tensions arising from social and economic
inequalities are inadequately addressed in the three countries’
curricular and teacher training policies.
There are legal bases integrating education for citizenship as part
of the State’s educational responsibilities in all three countries.
Education for citizenship is intended as a specific subject for the
primary and secondary school levels.
Educational proposals are required that can provide the popula tion with greater understanding of community life, skills for con fronting traditional ideological indoctrination, and for learning to
live together while recognizing differences, and for helping to
educate the imagination for a broader view of human affairs and
our responsibilities with regard to them.
The actors involved in teacher training in the three countries
consider it a key tool for the democratic development of soci eties. Their main criticisms indicate that there is a need to
improve the contents and the approaches to teacher training so
that they can respond to the current challenges of these soci eties from an interdisciplinary standpoint consistent with the stat ed educational goals.
THIS STUDY MAKES THE FOLLOWING RECOMMENDATIONS:
To promote processes for improved design of pre-and in-service
teacher training curricula by including pedagogical contents and
approaches for reinforcing education for citizenship.
To develop national and regional activities directed at teacher
trainers and primary and secondary education teachers that will
foster the exchange of experiences and viewpoints on education
for citizenship.
To support the production and distribution of materials and
teaching guides that can foster teacher retraining and the devel opment of more effective teaching practice in the three countries
under study.
To develop special refresher courses for the actors involved in
teacher training so they can incorporate an interdisciplinary
approach to education for citizenship based both on the chal lenges posed by national and international contexts and on the
needs of the stakeholders.
To involve teachers in the production and diffusion of participa tory pedagogical strategies that will provide consistent support
for the established objectives of education for citizenship, foster ing attitudes and capacities for peaceful human coexistence and
environmental sustainability.
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- Education [62]