Presenter Information

Christina L. McElwee

Abstract

Social justice issues are systemic problems of inequity that must be dealt with in a systemic way if they are to be resolved; it is my belief that resolution will come through the development of young children via trained preservice teachers, equipped to teach about empathy and inequity while celebrating diversity. If children, ages preschool to fourth grade, become aware of injustices surrounding social justice conflicts, the likelihood of social change occurring increases because of children’s exposure to issues of injustice. Preservice teachers and their future students must cultivate outlooks celebrating diversity and nurturing empathy, self-awareness, critical thinking, and creative problem solving to grapple with these issues. Findings include similarities in the learning pathways of both preservice teachers and their students as they develop their own worldview and an engagement with social justice issues, and the ease with which social justice topics and conversations can be infused into PreK-4 curriculum.

School

School of Education

Advisor

Denise Galluci

Submission Type

Paper

Publication Date

2016-04-06

Share

COinS
 
Apr 6th, 12:00 AM Apr 6th, 12:00 AM

Systemic Solutions to Systemic Problems of Injustice: Exploring Empathy and Self-Awareness in Preservice Teacher Training and the Preschool to Fourth Grade Classroom

Social justice issues are systemic problems of inequity that must be dealt with in a systemic way if they are to be resolved; it is my belief that resolution will come through the development of young children via trained preservice teachers, equipped to teach about empathy and inequity while celebrating diversity. If children, ages preschool to fourth grade, become aware of injustices surrounding social justice conflicts, the likelihood of social change occurring increases because of children’s exposure to issues of injustice. Preservice teachers and their future students must cultivate outlooks celebrating diversity and nurturing empathy, self-awareness, critical thinking, and creative problem solving to grapple with these issues. Findings include similarities in the learning pathways of both preservice teachers and their students as they develop their own worldview and an engagement with social justice issues, and the ease with which social justice topics and conversations can be infused into PreK-4 curriculum.

 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.