Abstract
In a divisive age, how do we support beginning teachers in taking up the challenge of teaching controversial topics and creating classroom environments that promote civil discourse? For insights, the author looked to the work of teacher educators in Northern Ireland, a region that is still affected by many generations of intense sectarian conflict. Their practices, she argues, offer timely lessons to educators in the U.S.
|
Clark, C.H., Avery, P.G. (2016). The psychology of controversial issues’ discussions. In Journell, W. (ed.), Reassessing the social studies curriculum: Promoting critical civic engagement in a politically polarized, post-9/11 world (pp. 109–120). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Google Scholar | |
|
Hess, D.E., McAvoy, P. (2015). The political classroom: Evidence and ethics in democratic education. New York, NY: Routledge. Google Scholar | |
|
Pace, J.L. (2015). The charged classroom: Predicaments and possibilities for democratic teaching. New York, NY: Routledge. Google Scholar | |
|
Parker, W.C., Hess, D. (2001). Teaching with and for discussion. Teaching and teacher education, 17 (3), 273–289. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI |

