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Journell, Wayne – NASSP Bulletin, 2022
It has been well established that controversial issue discussions are an integral component to a high-quality civic education. However, as the United States has become increasingly politically polarized, teachers have become more hesitant to engage students in discussions of controversial political issues. Two decades worth of literature on…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Civics, Group Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Journell, Wayne – Teachers College Record, 2016
Background/Context: The traditional stance on teacher political disclosure within K-12 education is that neutrality is the only morally appropriate approach for teachers to take when broaching political or social issues in their classes due to their role as state employees who serve a particular community. A number of recent high-profile cases of…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education
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Hilburn, Jeremy; Journell, Wayne; Buchanan, Lisa Brown – High School Journal, 2016
In this content analysis of state U.S. History and Civics standards, we compared the treatment of immigration across three types of states with differing immigration demographics. Analyzing standards from 18 states from a critical race methodology perspective, our findings indicated three sets of tensions: a unified American story versus local…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Immigration, Immigrants, United States History
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Journell, Wayne; Beeson, Melissa Walker; Ayers, Cheryl A. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2015
Secondary civics and government courses are often framed as a content area in which students learn about processes of government and ways of participating in a democratic society, as opposed to a discipline in which students use specific tools and ways of thinking that mimic those used by professionals within that discipline. In this article, we…
Descriptors: Civics, United States Government (Course), Political Science, Knowledge Level
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Journell, Wayne; Buchanan, Lisa Brown – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2013
This study describes one high school civics teacher's use of film as a way to improve his students' understanding of politics. Using episodes of "The West Wing," an award-winning political drama, over the course of a semester, the teacher was able to create an authentic context for political instruction that allowed his students to practice…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Teaching Methods, High School Students
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Journell, Wayne – History Teacher, 2014
In the United States courses on civics or government are often marginalized in most states' social studies curricula in favor of courses in United States or world history. The origins of this history-dominated approach have roots in the debates between the American Historical Association and the National Education Association at the turn of the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Social Studies, Politics
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Journell, Wayne; Buchanan, Lisa Brown – Social Studies, 2012
The authors make a case for using "The West Wing," a political drama that aired on NBC from 1999 to 2006, as an instructional tool in high school civics and government classes. The show offers a realistic portrayal of life in the White House through the eyes of Democratic President Josiah Bartlet and his senior staff that can further students'…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Civics, Political Issues, Television
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Journell, Wayne; Buchanan, Lisa Brown – American Secondary Education, 2012
Research suggests that secondary teachers across the United States are regularly turning to popular film as a way to engage students and deliver content. However, research on the use of film in secondary education has yet to focus on how students of varying abilities are able to understand and synthesize academic content when it is presented…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Audience Awareness, Films, Citizenship Education
Journell, Wayne; Castro, Erin L. – Multicultural Education, 2011
Latino students, in particular, often feel alienated from politics, especially at the federal level, and this political disengagement often correlates with the immigrant status of students or their families. However, recent research suggests that the amount and quality of social studies coursework taken by immigrant students can reverse these…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Immigration, Political Issues, Immigrants
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Journell, Wayne – PS: Political Science and Politics, 2010
The rise of state-mandated standards in public education have allowed legislators to answer the question of what constitutes a proper civic education, a debate that has existed in the United States since the turn of the twentieth century. Through the content they employ in their standards, states may indirectly influence the type of citizenship…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Content Analysis
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Journell, Wayne – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2011
This article describes the disparity in political instruction found in six government classes from three demographically diverse high schools during the 2008 Presidential Election. In general, students from working-class households or those in lower-level classes were rarely given opportunities to discuss politics at a national level or engage in…
Descriptors: High Schools, Political Campaigns, Presidents, Political Science
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Journell, Wayne – Social Education, 2009
One of the primary goals of social studies education in the United States is to prepare students for civically active, politically informed, and socially engaged democratic citizenship. Too often, however, the curricula fall short of this goal. Textbooks and state curriculum standards tend to portray citizenship as a static concept rather than an…
Descriptors: Propaganda, Textbooks, Democracy, Elections