Learning how to handle controversial issues in schools and other education settings: A good practice guide
By David Kerr and Ted Huddleston
()
About this ebook
Controversy and controversial issues are at the centre and at all levels of our democratic societies. This means that learning how to deal with such issues must always be at the heart of an effective education for democratic citizenship and human rights education (EDC/HRE). That learning takes place in schools and other education settings as children and young people progress in their education from early years, through primary, lower secondary and upper-secondary phases, into tertiary and higher education and beyond.
The Council of Europe has an outstanding record in promoting education for democratic citizenship, human rights education and intercultural dialogue, and in fostering and teaching about the importance of democratic culture. It is therefore fitting that the Council of Europe, in partnership with the European Union, through the Joint Programme “Democratic and Inclusive School Culture in Operation” (DISCO) – formerly known as the Human Rights and Democracy in Action Pilot Projects Scheme – has helped to facilitate the creation of this very timely good practice guide, which complements the manuals Teaching controversial issues and Managing controversy.
David Kerr
David Kerr MBChB, DM, FRCP, FRCPE, is a UK trained endocrinologist and has recently joined Sutter Health after spending almost a decade as a researcher/innovator in Santa Barbara, CA (https://www.davidkerrmd.com/). This began in 2014, with David’s appointment as Director of Research and Innovation at Sansum Diabetes Research Institute before moving to the Diabetes Technology Society as their lead for Digital Health last year. David has now joined Sutter Health as Senior Investigator, Diabetes Research and Digital Health Equity. David’s recent research has focused on offering wearable digital health technologies such as continuous glucose monitors to marginalized and historically excluded communities to help understand the potential value of real time physiological data. He has published more than 400 articles, commentaries and opinion pieces as well as co-authoring the first two books focusing on diabetes and digital health. David’s research has also included the use of “food-as-medicine for adults with or at-risk of diabetes. As part of this research, increasing participation in clinical research by traditionally hard to reach communities has been achieved through the creation of specially trained “Community Scientists from the same communities. David also has an adjunct position in the Dept of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at Rice University in Houston Texas, and recently co-Chair of an NIDDK working group looking at the impact of innovation on furthering research into the heterogeneity of diabetes. You can follow David on ‘X’ at @godiabetesmd.
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Learning how to handle controversial issues in schools and other education settings - David Kerr
Preface
Controversy and controversial issues are at the centre and at all levels of our democratic societies. This means that learning how to deal with such issues must always be at the heart of an effective education for democratic citizenship and human rights education (EDC/HRE). That learning takes place in schools and other education settings as children and young people progress in their education from early years, through primary, lower secondary and upper-secondary phases, into tertiary and higher education and beyond. As Professor (Sir) Bernard Crick noted in his seminal report of 1998, Education for Citizenship and the Teaching of Democracy in Schools, which led to the introduction of Citizenship as a new statutory school subject in England in 2002:
Learning how to engage in dialogue with and respect people whose values are different from one’s own is central to the democratic process and essential to the protection and strengthening of democracy and fostering of a culture of human rights.
The Council of Europe has an outstanding record in promoting education for democratic citizenship, human rights education and intercultural dialogue, and in fostering and teaching about the importance of democratic culture. It is therefore fitting that the Council of Europe, in partnership with the European Union, through the Joint Programme Democratic and Inclusive School Culture in Operation
(DISCO) – formerly known as the Human Rights and Democracy in Action Pilot Projects Scheme – has helped to facilitate the creation of this good practice guide on learning how to handle controversial issues in schools and other education settings.
This good practice guide is very timely. There are many issues in society and communities that children and young people in Europe are keen to discuss. Yet often they are denied opportunities in schools and other education settings because such issues are seen as too challenging to handle in classrooms and learning environments, or to manage at a whole-school or education-setting level.
This guide captures the rich learning that has emerged over past years from the promotion of the two manuals we have produced – Teaching controversial issues (TCI), a training pack for teachers, and Managing controversy (MC), a practical support tool for school leaders and senior managers – as they have been taken up and used by a range of people and institutions involved in education and training in countries and contexts across Europe. Above all, the guide shows how the notion that controversial issues are too challenging to deal with and manage in schools and other education settings can be overcome through dissemination and training, and through innovative and effective approaches to handling controversial issues being put in place in classrooms and other teaching and learning environments.
We hope that this guide, along with the two manuals and the various translations and adaptations that are emerging across Europe, will continue to strengthen the ways in which controversial issues are handled in schools and other education settings across Europe. This will benefit all children and young people as they progress through their education. It will also help to contribute to more effective and impactful EDC/HRE and to the protection and strengthening of our democratic societies at all levels.
We hope that you will learn something from the guide and, in time, consider contributing your own experiences of working with the two manuals across Europe to further iterations of the guide so that it remains topical, relevant and useful.
David Kerr
Ted Huddleston
Young Citizens (UK)
September 2020
Introduction
About this good practice guide
This good practice guide on learning how to handle controversial issues in schools and other education settings builds on our experience of piloting two manuals on controversial issues, which were funded by the European Union (EU) and the Council of Europe and implemented by the latter. The manuals, Teaching controversial issues and Managing controversy, were designed to help schools and other education settings learn how to handle controversial issues in a range of education settings. This guide:
sets out the lessons learned by trainers, policy makers and facilitators in a range of European countries;
describes why and how the manuals have been used;
advises on how the manuals can best be applied in current and future training.
The guide consists of four sections:
Handling controversial issues using the manuals –What, where, why and how?
Engaging with the manuals – Case study experiences
Good practice guidelines – Lessons learned from working with the manuals
Accessing the manuals – List of translations.
The first section sets out where and how controversial issues arise in education, and the rationale for learning how to handle them in schools and other education settings. It also introduces the two manuals and gives brief details of how they have been used across a range of European countries and settings. The second section provides more detailed case studies from a range of expert trainers and facilitators showing why and how they have used the manuals to train teachers, trainee teachers, school leaders, managers, other education professionals, students and young people, among others, to handle controversial issues. The third section distils the lessons learned from those who have used the manuals in practice, to help others who are currently using the manuals and/or are considering working with them in the future. The final section provides brief details of where the manuals can be accessed and downloaded, including a list of the European languages into which they have been translated.
The good practice guide is aimed at anyone with an