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El. knyga: Pedagogy of the Community of Philosophical Enquiry as Citizenship Education: Global Perspectives on Talking Democracy into Action [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (University of Sheffield, UK), Edited by (Mahidol University, Thailand), Edited by (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
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"This edited volume combines reflections, methods, and experiences from a globally diverse group of scholars to investigate the meaning, value and effectiveness of the pedagogy of the Community of Philosophical Enquiry (CoPE) - derived from or in conversation with Lipman and Sharp's Philosophy for Children (P4C) - in the context of civic education. Maintaining that a rich diversity of voices is an important corrective to narrower academic discourses, the chapters in this book bring an array of scholarly thought from across the world working in various political and educational contexts to bear on a common question: How can CoPE help practitioners engage in civic education? The contributions draw on qualitative methods, philosophical literature, and practitioner case studies to explore the benefits, challenges, questions and methods related to the use of CoPE for the sake of citizenship education in Thailand, Malaysia, Italy, Iceland, Israel, Greece, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. Ultimately, the book provides critical reflections and insights into the civic dimension of CoPE (and of some CoPE-related practices) across a wide range of pedagogic, cultural and political contexts. Addressing the need for a touchstone publication on the interplay between CoPE and citizenship education, the book will be of interest to academics and postgraduate students interested in the philosophy of education, citizenship education, democratic education, and international and comparative education"--

This edited volume combines reflections, methods, and experiences from a globally diverse group of scholars to investigate the meaning, value, and effectiveness of the pedagogy of the Community of Philosophical Enquiry (CoPE) – derived from or in conversation with Lipman and Sharp’s Philosophy for Children (P4C) – in the context of civic education.

Maintaining that a rich diversity of voices is an important corrective to narrower academic discourses, the chapters in this book bring an array of scholarly thought from across the world working in various political and educational contexts to bear on a common question: How can CoPE help practitioners engage in civic education? The contributions draw on qualitative methods, philosophical literature, and practitioner case studies to explore the benefits, challenges, questions, and methods related to the use of CoPE for the sake of citizenship education in Thailand, Malaysia, Italy, Iceland, Israel, Greece, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. Ultimately, the book provides critical reflections and insights into the civic dimension of CoPE (and some CoPE-related practices) across a wide range of pedagogic, cultural, and political contexts.

Addressing the need for a touchstone publication on the interplay between CoPE and citizenship education, the book will be of interest to academics and postgraduate students interested in the philosophy of education, citizenship education, democratic education, and international and comparative education.



This edited book combines reflections, methods, and experiences from a globally diverse group of scholars to investigate the meaning, value and effectiveness of the pedagogy of the Community of Philosophical Enquiry (CoPE)–derived from or in conversation with Lipman and Sharp’s Philosophy for Children (P4C)–in the context of civic education.

Foreword

Preface

Chapter 1: Introduction to The Pedagogy of the Community of Philosophical
Enquiry as Citizenship Education

Part I: CoPE and Citizenship Education in Primary and Secondary Educational
Contexts

Chapter 2: Children imagining their agency: The Capabilities Approach and the
Community of Philosophical Inquiry (CPI)

Chapter 3: Critical Thinking and Democratic Citizenship in a Diverse Islamic
Education Context: The Relevance of the Community of Philosophical Inquiry.

Chapter 4: Community-of-Inquiry Pedagogy: Communities of Shared
Pain as Promoting Empathy for the Other in the Arab-Israel Conflict

Chapter 5: Consent as a Focus of Inquiry in Citizenship Education

Chapter 6: The Individual and the Community: the Role of Philosophical
Enquiry in Citizenship Education

Part II: CoPE and Citizenship Education in Higher Education

Chapter 7: Democracy, Philosophical Enquiry and Citizenship Education in
Thailand.

Chapter 8: Citizenship Education in Higher Education: the Potential of a
Philosophical Approach to Fostering Citizenship.

Chapter 9: The Community of Philosophical Enquiry (CoPE) as a Pedagogy to
Support Thai Undergraduate Muslim Students Encounters with Islamophobia

Chapter 10: Reflections on Dialogic Education, Civic Science, and Community
Engagement: If You Can Do It In the Classroom, You Can Do It In The World

Part III: Philosophical Perspectives on CoPE as Citizenship Education

Chapter 11: Learning from Suffering in the Community of Philosophical
Inquiry: Leaving our Grasping Egos Behind

Chapter 12: Guilt and moral education in Philosophy for Children (P4C)

Chapter 13: From Critical Thinking to Global Citizenship: Critical Beings

Afterword
Joshua Forstenzer is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Co-Director of the Centre for Engaged Philosophy, University of Sheffield, UK.

Fufy Demissie is Senior Lecturer in Education, Sheffield Hallam University, UK.

Vachararutai Boontinand is Lecturer in Human Rights and Peace Studies and Director of the Institute of Human Rights and Peace Studies, Mahidol University, Thailand.