: Ina ter Avest, Dan-Paul Jozsa, Thorsten Knauth, Javier Rosón, Geir Skeie (Hrsg.)
: Dialogue and Conflict on Religion. Studies of Classroom Interaction in European Countries
: Waxmann Verlag GmbH
: 9783830972723
: 1
: CHF 21.70
:
: Pädagogik
: English
: 317
: kein Kopierschutz/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

Regarding teaching about religions and worldviews, there is a gap between the ambitions of educational policies and our knowledge about what really happens in the classroom. Research on classroom interaction about religion is not very far developed, either nationally or as international and as comparative research. There is a growing awareness, however, that research on pupils’ perspectives on religion in education is needed in order to develop sustainable approaches for future education, and this book is a contribution to this research. The classroom can be seen as an arena both for learning and for micro-politics. This arena is shaped, and sometimes challenged and restricted, or even curtailed, by the wider societal and political context. In this book we present studies of classroom interaction that focus on the micro-sociological level of research. The studies presented open up a rather unexplored field of international comparative research on religion in education and the role of diversity for classroom interaction, giving deeper insights into what happens in classrooms, displaying varieties of interactive patterns and relating these to their specific contexts.

Content6
Classroom Interaction. A Foreword8
Introduction11
Part I: Dialogical Methodology. Methodological Approaches of Classroom Interaction and Incident Analysis16
Incident Analysis – a Key Category of REDCo Classroom Analysis18
Hermeneutic Video Analysis in Ethnographic Research29
Part II: Examples of Classroom Interaction Analysis40
Brainwashing? An Example of Dialogue and Conflict from Religious Education in England42
Prospects for and Obstacles to Dialogue in Religious Education in Estonia63
Meeting Gods and Religions in School87
‘Dialogue on a Grassroots Level’111
Interreligious Dialogue in the Framework of Confessional Religious Education135
‘… then just go to the restroom’ – Analysis of an Incident in a Classroom Conversation on Mourning and Death157
Scenes from a Classroom175
Dialogues about Religion195
Pupils, Teachers and Researchers: Thinking from Double Hermeneutics226
Part III: Comparative Aspects of Classroom Interaction248
Power to the People!250
Towards an Ethnographic Methodology in Intercultural Education277
Classroom Interaction – Concluding Remarks310
List of authors317