Can Educators Make a Difference? Experimenting with and Experiencing, Democracy in Education (Hc)
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As the title of this book suggests, how we understand, perceive and experience democracy may
have a significant effect on how we actually engage in, and with, democracy. Within the
educational context, this is a key concern, and forms the basis of the research presented in this
volume within a critical, comparative analysis. The Global Doing Democracy Research Project
(GDDRP), which currently has some 70 scholars in over 20 countries examining how educators
do democracy, provides the framework in which diverse scholars explore a host of concerns related to democracy and democratic
education, including the impact of neoliberalism, political literacy, critical engagement, teaching and learning for and about democracy,
social justice, and the meaning of power/power relations within the educational context.
Ultimately, the contributors of this book collectively ask: can there be democracy without a critically engaged education, and,
importantly, what role do educators play in this context and process? Why many educators in diverse contexts believe that they are
unable, dissuaded and/or prevented from doing thick democratic education is problematized in this book but the authors also seek to
illustrate that, despite the challenges, barriers and concerns about doing democracy in education, something can, and should, be done to
develop, cultivate and ingratiate schools and society with more meaningful democratic practices and processes.
This book breaks new ground by using a similar empirical methodology within a number of international contexts to gage the
democratic sentiments and actions of educators, which raises a host of questions about
epistemology, teacher education, policy development, pedagogy, institutional cultures,
conscientization, and the potential for transformational change in education.
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