Go to:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Start > Publications > View > Participation experiences and civic concepts, attitudes and engagement: implications for citizenship education projects
Publication

Participation experiences and civic concepts, attitudes and engagement: implications for citizenship education projects

Title
Participation experiences and civic concepts, attitudes and engagement: implications for citizenship education projects
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2003
Authors
Journal
Vol. 2 No. 3
Pages: 430-445
ISSN: 1474-9041
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Indexing
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-00J-3NJ
Abstract (EN): This article considers participation experiences of 14 year-old and upper secondary students in six European countries that were involved in the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) Civic Education Study: the Czech Republic, Norway, Portugal, Slovenia, Sweden and Switzerland, countries that vary in their history of institution of democratic regimes. Participation has been considered as a crucial dimension of citizenship, and experiences within civil society are viewed as a relevant opportunity for developing personal and social resources essential for the survival and expansion of democracy. Additionally, participation experiences in adolescence seem to be a good predictor of political engagement during adult life. Results show that participation is most evident in organisations that provide enrichment activities (sports, music, computers), but both 14 year-old and upper secondary students are involved in voluntary activities, in some civic-related organisations (mainly Scouts, religious affiliated and environmental), and in experiences within the school (with student councils and school newspapers at the top). However, cross-national and cross-age variations are significant. Overall, there seems to be a positive impact of the frequency of students’ involvement on civic concepts, attitudes and engagement, but results also reveal that more is not necessarily better. The most relevant implication for the development of citizenship education projects is that ‘action’ can be a powerful learning tool but only if it is intentionally designed and systematically supported: the quality of participation experiences, both in terms of meaningful involvement, of interaction with (different) others, and opportunities for personal integration, is therefore crucial if the goal is to promote the personal empowerment and social pluralism on which the essence of democracy relies.
Language: Portuguese
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 16
License type: Click to view license CC BY-NC
Related Publications

Of the same journal

'You went to Europe and returned different': transformative learning experiences of international students in Portugal (2018)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Cosmin Nada; Catherine Montgomery; Helena C. Araújo
What do young adults’ educational experiences tell us about Early School Leaving processes? (2020)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Sofia A. Santos; Cosmin Nada; Eunice Macedo; Helena C. Araújo
The value of doctoral education in the intersection of the multiple purposes of higher education (2023)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Patrícia Alves; Amélia Lopes; Ricardo Cruz Correia; Isabel Menezes
The reconfiguration of the modern social contract: new forms of citizenship and education (2002)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Stephen R. Stoer; António M. Magalhães

See all (12)

Recommend this page Top
Copyright 1996-2024 © Reitoria da Universidade do Porto  I Terms and Conditions  I Acessibility  I Index A-Z  I Guest Book
Page created on: 2024-04-25 20:10:00 | Acceptable Use Policy | Data Protection Policy | Complaint Portal