Current events and citizenship intersect in students’ classrooms in ways both problematic and full of potential. Teachers take a range of approaches, from the passive, weekly regurgitation of news stories to the empowered use of current events to explore broader issues and inform civic engagement. Creating an open classroom climate can help teachers unlock the civic potential of current events, which aids students in building civic knowledge, internal political efficacy, and civic self-efficacy. This article begins by introducing teachers to research on open classroom climates using data from the International Civic and Citizenship Survey (ICCS). We then provide examples of the components of an open classroom climate and a survey created from ICCS items for teachers to assess their own classroom’s climate. Elements of an open classroom climate are applied to current events pedagogy with a lesson plan for young children that explores civic responses to water scarcity and features All the Water in the World, a picture book by George Ella Lyon and Katherine Tillotson.
Article navigation
1 November 2016
Research Article|
November 01 2016
Unlocking the Civic Potential of Current Events with an Open Classroom Climate Available to Purchase
Jennice McCafferty-Wright;
Jennice McCafferty-Wright
1
University of Missouri
Search for other works by this author on:
Ryan Knowles
Ryan Knowles
2
Utah State University
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Emerald Publishing Limited
2016
Social Studies Research and Practice (2016) 11 (3): 112–121.
Citation
McCafferty-Wright J, Knowles R (2016), "Unlocking the Civic Potential of Current Events with an Open Classroom Climate". Social Studies Research and Practice, Vol. 11 No. 3 pp. 112–121, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/SSRP-03-2016-B0009
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Teaching change and continuity with historical analogies
Social Studies Research and Practice (June,2019)
Race, citizenship and national identity in The School Paper, 1946-1968
History of Education Review (June,2015)
Teaching for Democratic Citizenship: Arriving at a Guiding Question for Pedagogical Practice
Social Studies Research and Practice (November,2014)
NCSS notable trade book lesson plan: Windows written by Julia Denos
Social Studies Research and Practice (August,2019)
NCSS notable trade book lesson plan: the girl who buried her dreams in a can
Social Studies Research and Practice (July,2020)
Related Chapters
“They have their Hands on the Pulse of the City”: Teachers’ Constructions of Students’ Civic Knowledge in an Urban Middle School Classroom
Youth Engagement: The Civic-Political Lives of Children and Youth
Food Security and Conflict
Food Security in an Uncertain World: An International Perspective
Chapter 6 Embracing Twitter as a Research Tool
Social Information Research
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
