How democracy and Human Rights are perceived by students at the end of their elementary education: A study from the history teaching end

How democracy and Human Rights are perceived by students at the end of their elementary education: A study from the history teaching end

Authors

  • Carlos Muñoz Universidad de concepción
  • Nelson Vasquez
  • Maria Sánchez Universidad de Valladolid

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5027/psicoperspectivas-Vol12-Issue1-fulltext-230

Keywords:

curriculum, citizenship training, democracy, Human Rights

Abstract

We report the results of a qualitative piece of research conducted in the Bio-Bio Region of Chile, which aimed at studying how students perceive democracy and human rights when they finished their elementary education. It also looked into how they perceive these topics in their curriculum and in learning activities to which they had been exposed in their History class. Results suggest that, even though both get covered reasonably well, there are big differences across students in terms of assimilation. Although students perceive democracy as a static concept, rigid and stalled in time, most of the time foreign to school experience and which fits in other contexts, they believe human rights are fundamental in order to guarantee justice, freedom of speech, respect to diversity and community life.

Published

2012-12-28

How to Cite

Muñoz, C., Vasquez, N., & Sánchez, M. (2012). How democracy and Human Rights are perceived by students at the end of their elementary education: A study from the history teaching end. Psicoperspectivas, 12(1), 95-115. https://doi.org/10.5027/psicoperspectivas-Vol12-Issue1-fulltext-230
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