Hand to Hand: Teaching Tolerance and Social Justice One Child at a Time (Essay) Hand to Hand: Teaching Tolerance and Social Justice One Child at a Time (Essay)

Hand to Hand: Teaching Tolerance and Social Justice One Child at a Time (Essay‪)‬

Childhood Education 2012, Jan-Feb, 88, 1

    • 79,00 Kč
    • 79,00 Kč

Publisher Description

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Many educators (Cohen, 2006, 2007; Jones, 2004; Stevens & Charles, 2005) believe that teaching tolerance is a pedagogical imperative, while others relegate children's moral development to the purview of parents. Still others (Barrier-Ferreira, 2008; Jones, 2004; Mustakova-Poussardt, 2004; Paley and the Teaching Tolerance Project, 1998) go beyond tolerance to promote instruction in social justice. Tolerance connotes patience, forbearance, and impartiality, as well as open-mindedness. In early childhood, possessing tolerance would refer to children's burgeoning awareness of themselves in relation to others, and the capability to accept appearance and behavior different from one's own. But is teaching tolerance, additionally considered the ability to care and have empathy for others, enough? Perhaps it is more appropriate to teach preschool children tolerance in conjunction with social justice, the principles and habits of mind that guide individuals to actively treat others with fairness, respect, and responsibility ("Social justice," n.d.). Social justice for preschool children would indicate an ability to treat others with fairness, even if that means putting the needs of others above one's own. It may be that teaching tolerance for very young children essentially sets the stage for a more developed understanding of tolerance and justice to grow as children move on to elementary school and beyond.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2012
1 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
28
Pages
PUBLISHER
Association for Childhood Education International
SIZE
243.9
KB

More Books by Childhood Education

Successful Transition to School for Australian Aboriginal Children: The 2005 International Focus Issue of Childhood Education Focused on the Education of Aboriginal and Indigenous Children. Guest Editor Jyotsna Pattnaik Located Too Many Excellent Articles on That Important Topic to Include in One Issue. Therefore, She will Continue to Provide These Theme-Related Articles, Here and in Future Issues. Successful Transition to School for Australian Aboriginal Children: The 2005 International Focus Issue of Childhood Education Focused on the Education of Aboriginal and Indigenous Children. Guest Editor Jyotsna Pattnaik Located Too Many Excellent Articles on That Important Topic to Include in One Issue. Therefore, She will Continue to Provide These Theme-Related Articles, Here and in Future Issues.
2006
Creating Friendly and Supportive Environments for Teachers. Creating Friendly and Supportive Environments for Teachers.
2010
Teachers Search and Research: Questioning Educational Practices (Teacher As Researcher) Teachers Search and Research: Questioning Educational Practices (Teacher As Researcher)
2009
Books for Children (Buyers Guide) Books for Children (Buyers Guide)
2009
Learning English with Ipods. Learning English with Ipods.
2008
Learning to Read and Write Using the Internet: Sites You Don't Want to Miss!(Technology in the Classroom) Learning to Read and Write Using the Internet: Sites You Don't Want to Miss!(Technology in the Classroom)
2006