Hardback
Educating for Democracy
The Case for Participatory Budgeting in Schools
9781035302161 Edward Elgar Publishing
This captivating book provides a detailed examination of school participatory budgeting (SPB), a process that combines school democracy, civic engagement and citizenship education. Presenting insights from SPB processes across the globe, it advocates for the wider rollout of programs which amplify students’ voices, their deliberative capacities and decision-making power while improving school climate and campus infrastructure.
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Critical Acclaim
More Information
This captivating book provides a detailed examination of school participatory budgeting (SPB), a democratic process that combines citizenship education, civic engagement and participatory governance. Presenting insights from SPB processes across the globe, it advocates for the wider rollout of programs which amplify students’ voices, their deliberative capacities and decision-making power while improving school climate and campus infrastructure.
Daniel Schugurensky and Tara Bartlett bring together an international range of practitioners and researchers to analyse the main accomplishments, challenges and lessons learned through the design, implementation, and evaluation of SPB. Chapter authors highlight how SPB is gaining traction and how national and local contexts can explain similarities and differences. The authors contend that this learner-centered pedagogy nurtures student agency, cross-curricular learning, prosocial behaviors and democratic practices.
This book is an essential tool for teachers, educational leaders, and scholars from social sciences and related fields interested in implementing SPB and evaluating its impact.
Daniel Schugurensky and Tara Bartlett bring together an international range of practitioners and researchers to analyse the main accomplishments, challenges and lessons learned through the design, implementation, and evaluation of SPB. Chapter authors highlight how SPB is gaining traction and how national and local contexts can explain similarities and differences. The authors contend that this learner-centered pedagogy nurtures student agency, cross-curricular learning, prosocial behaviors and democratic practices.
This book is an essential tool for teachers, educational leaders, and scholars from social sciences and related fields interested in implementing SPB and evaluating its impact.
Critical Acclaim
‘With democracy under attack world-wide, this book could not come at a better time. Civic education has long been seen as a means for restoring commitments to democratic institutions, but when it comes to civic engagement, boosting political participation has always been a difficult nut to crack. Enter school-based participatory budgeting. As an approach to democratic renewal, the power of PB is well-known. As a pedagogy, it holds particular promise. This book offers a much-needed roadmap with dozens of practical how-to examples. Teachers, principals, academics, and policymakers who want to know what school participatory budgeting is and how it can help strengthen democracy should all read this gem of a book.’
– Joel Westheimer, Research Chair in Democracy and Education, University of Ottawa, Canada
‘Democracy is a highly contested, nebulous and contentious concept. Everyone wants it but we are often focused on, and frustrated by, normative elections as the way to get there, and those elections are fraught with problems, including, ironically, not building a critically-engaged democracy. In Educating for Democracy: The Case for Participatory Budgeting in Schools, Daniel Schugurensky and Tara Bartlett have pulled together a wonderful group of international scholars to highlight the process of building democracy, within citizens, schools and communities. While important, the end-point is not as fundamental as the process, and this book provides significant insight into how participatory budgeting can help us create more engaged and democratic societies. This book can help us start to rethink citizenship education at the local level.’
– Paul R. Carr, UNESCO Chair in Democracy, Global Citizenship & Transformative Education, Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada
– Joel Westheimer, Research Chair in Democracy and Education, University of Ottawa, Canada
‘Democracy is a highly contested, nebulous and contentious concept. Everyone wants it but we are often focused on, and frustrated by, normative elections as the way to get there, and those elections are fraught with problems, including, ironically, not building a critically-engaged democracy. In Educating for Democracy: The Case for Participatory Budgeting in Schools, Daniel Schugurensky and Tara Bartlett have pulled together a wonderful group of international scholars to highlight the process of building democracy, within citizens, schools and communities. While important, the end-point is not as fundamental as the process, and this book provides significant insight into how participatory budgeting can help us create more engaged and democratic societies. This book can help us start to rethink citizenship education at the local level.’
– Paul R. Carr, UNESCO Chair in Democracy, Global Citizenship & Transformative Education, Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada