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      Global Citizenship Education conceptualisation in curriculum guidelines of the New Zealand Curriculum

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      The New Zealand Annual Review of Education
      Victoria University of Wellington Library

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          Abstract

          Global Citizenship Education is a significant theme in the United Nations Educational Sustainable Development Goal #4. The aim of the goal is “to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” (UNESCO, 2015b). This article provides an insight into where and how notions of Global Citizenship and Global Citizenship Education are represented within the New Zealand Curriculum. The systematic review of the document’s content and learning objectives, themes, and categories were based on the thematic framework proposed by Cox and Browes. These were generated utilising UNESCO’s definitions of Global Citizenship Education and the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement’s international assessment studies of citizenship and civic education. In spite of the limitations of this research systematic review, that is, only the New Zealand Curriculum document is reviewed, this study adds some understandings of how and where Global Citizenship and Global Citizenship Education concepts exist at the curriculum level within Aotearoa New Zealand, making the suggestion of the incorporation of a Global Citizenship Education definition and concepts into the curriculum guideline documents to enhance the connection and fulfilment of Sustainable Development Goal #4.

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          Most cited references30

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            Using Templates in the Thematic Analysis of Text

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              Social constructivist perspectives on teaching and learning.

              Social constructivist perspectives focus on the interdependence of social and individual processes in the co-construction of knowledge. After the impetus for understanding the influence of social and cultural factors on cognition is reviewed, mechanisms hypothesized to account for learning from this perspective are identified, drawing from Piagetian and Vygotskian accounts. The empirical research reviewed illustrates (a) the application of institutional analyses to investigate schooling as a cultural process, (b) the application of interpersonal analyses to examine how interactions promote cognition and learning, and (c) discursive analyses examining and manipulating the patterns and opportunities in instructional conversation. The review concludes with a discussion of the application of this perspective to selected contemporary issues, including: acquiring expertise across domains, assessment, educational equity, and educational reform.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                The New Zealand Annual Review of Education
                nzaroe
                Victoria University of Wellington Library
                1178-3311
                1171-3283
                July 20 2021
                July 20 2021
                : 25
                : 57-75
                Article
                10.26686/nzaroe.v25.6935
                42efe7f9-7e4a-44c1-b396-4d2d755cc1ed
                © 2021
                History

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