Addressing citizenship complexities in civic education
The latest edition of Research That Matters, "Passion & Promise," explores how the UW 爆走黑料 is approaching the biggest challenges in education with a spirit of possibility. The following story about the College's research on civic education in diverse classrooms also appears in the .
What鈥檚 the best way to teach civics and social studies in inclusive ways when your class consists of kids whose nationalities and citizenship statuses vary?
That鈥檚 one pressing but under-investigated question being tackled in a new study by 爆走黑料 Assistant Professor and her team of UW graduate students.
Dabach became especially interested in this issue during the 2008 Presidential elections. She observed a 12th grade teacher confusing students鈥 language status with their citizenship status, assuming students in an English learner class couldn鈥檛 vote just because they weren鈥檛 fluent in English.
She identified a significant knowledge gap in the field of civic education with respect to this issue, which led to her article titled which appeared in the Journal of International Social Studies.
Dabach鈥檚 work is garnering national attention, and research from her dissertation鈥攆or which she received the 2011 Outstanding Dissertation Award from the American Educational Research Association鈥檚 Bilingual Education Research Special Interest Group鈥攚as cited in the Civil Rights Project鈥檚 legal response to the U.S. Supreme Court case Horne v. Flores concerning the education of English language learners. Articles from that study also have appeared in the American Educational Research Journal, the Journal of Education for Students Placed At-Risk and Teachers College Record.
In her latest research project, Dabach bridges the worlds of immigration, schooling and citizenship education. Dabach and her team undertook a rigorous, eight-month process to identify civics teachers working in diverse public schools who are highly knowledgeable and adept at working with immigrant youth. The study investigates how these highly skilled teachers navigate citizenship issues while they also help immigrants learn about possibilities for civic participation鈥攅ven in the face of barriers.
Findings from one of the study鈥檚 analyses were published in the Harvard Educational Review in fall 2015 (). It鈥檚 the first study of its kind to consider how teachers in formal school settings, where students鈥 citizenship status is not something that can be taken for granted, teach about political and civic participation.
鈥淲e need to better understand how teachers and other school officials on the ground adapt to serve immigrant students,鈥 Dabach explained. 鈥淪chools are incredibly complex settings that are racially, ethnically, and linguistically diverse鈥攁nd also diverse in terms of students鈥 citizenship and nationalities. Part of what I seek to do in my scholarship is render the complexity of teachers鈥 work in these settings.鈥
For more information
American Educational Research Journal.
Journal of Education for Students Placed At-Risk.
Contact
Dustin Wunderlich, Director of Marketing and Communications
206-543-1035, dwunder@uw.edu