Journal Articles
Use and misuse of affective approach in nationalistic education within the context of civic education
- Use and misuse of affective approach in nationalistic education within the context of civic education
- Pacific-Asian Education, 15(1), 6-24, 2003
- Pacific Circle Consortium
- 2003
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Secondary Education
- In Hong Kong, the Guidelines on Civic Education for Schools (1996) recommended nationalistic education as one of the five aspects of civic educatioin. As an aspect of civic education, nationalistic education should serve both a cognitive mission of "preparing critical thinking, responsible, participating, multidimensional citizens" and an affective mission of "instilling the sense of national identity, love and loyalty to the nation state and patriotism". These two missions are in potential conflict. In order to achieve both missions, an appropriate balance between cognitive and affective teaching approaches is necessary. Two commonly adopted affective approaches used for the affective function are positive and negative approaches. This paper is an exploratory report of case studies on the use and misuse of affective approaches in nationalistic edcuation by some civic educators in Hong Kong secondary schools. It was found that in-depth and systematic reflection was needed to balance the two potential conflicting missions. Moreover, it was also found that if handled inappropriately, a positive approach might lead to bias and indoctrination while the extreme manifestation of a negative approach might even lead to 'education for hatred'. Both are contradictory to the cognitive function of preparing critical thinking citizens.[Copyright © 2003 Pacific Circle Consortium for Education.]
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 10198725
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/7cd6f95e
- 2015-03-26
Recent Journal Articles
探究課程政策對教師遊戲教學信念的影響: 以香港兩所幼稚園教師為例Journal Articles
Educational value priorities of Chinese parents in a global city: A mixed-methods study in Hong KongJournal Articles
The construct of integrated group discussion (IGD) among undergraduate students: To what extent does group discussion performance reflect performance on IGD tasks?Journal Articles
Constructivist learning approaches do not necessarily promote immediate learning outcome or interest in science learningJournal Articles
Work–life balance among higher-education professionals in Hong Kong and Thailand during the COVID-19 pandemicJournal Articles
Healthy eating report card for pre-school children in Hong KongJournal Articles
Assessing the relationship between teacher inclusive beliefs, behaviors, and competences of students with autism spectrum disordersJournal Articles
Developing language teachers’ professional generative AI competence: An intervention study in an initial language teacher education courseJournal Articles