In our response to Tilhou’s article published last issue, “The Morning Meeting: Fostering a Participatory Democracy Begins with Youth in Public Education,” we share and discuss ethnographic data from Morning Meetings in two U.S. elementary classrooms. We detail ways the democratic potential of Morning Meetings is being cultivated in these classroom communities where one teacher has extended the Responsive Classroom model while the other has developed his own structures. We show how classroom democratic norms are established through humanizing community-building social practices as we argue that Morning Meetings must be understood across time and activities that may have an academic function
The purpose of this study was to explore development of civic participation in children in primary g...
Given the current challenges facing our democracy in the United States, the role of public schools i...
This article is a response to “This is What Democracy Looks Like: Some Thoughts on Democratic School...
There is a faltering sense of democracy in America\u27s current political climate due to polarized o...
ABSTRACT This is the account of a practitioner using action research in his classroom. Lamenting a ...
This paper shares a participatory action research study conducted by a team of researchers at a univ...
The article adds to a growing conversation that recognizes and supports young children’s civic capab...
This response to Samuelsson’s typology for assessing deliberative democracy in classroom discussions...
A dramatically shifting economic landscape presents proponents for democratic classrooms with a hist...
The current era of standards and accountability in U.S. public schooling narrows recognition and ass...
The article by Collins, Hess, and Lowery (2019) explores struggles teachers faced in order to pursue...
This study explores development of civic participation in children in primary (K-2) grade classrooms...
Discusses the principles of a democratic classroom, and how implementing these principles can create...
This response considers the strengths of Carr and Thesee\u27s paper and explores further areas of re...
This article explores civic learning, civic participation, and the development of civic agency withi...
The purpose of this study was to explore development of civic participation in children in primary g...
Given the current challenges facing our democracy in the United States, the role of public schools i...
This article is a response to “This is What Democracy Looks Like: Some Thoughts on Democratic School...
There is a faltering sense of democracy in America\u27s current political climate due to polarized o...
ABSTRACT This is the account of a practitioner using action research in his classroom. Lamenting a ...
This paper shares a participatory action research study conducted by a team of researchers at a univ...
The article adds to a growing conversation that recognizes and supports young children’s civic capab...
This response to Samuelsson’s typology for assessing deliberative democracy in classroom discussions...
A dramatically shifting economic landscape presents proponents for democratic classrooms with a hist...
The current era of standards and accountability in U.S. public schooling narrows recognition and ass...
The article by Collins, Hess, and Lowery (2019) explores struggles teachers faced in order to pursue...
This study explores development of civic participation in children in primary (K-2) grade classrooms...
Discusses the principles of a democratic classroom, and how implementing these principles can create...
This response considers the strengths of Carr and Thesee\u27s paper and explores further areas of re...
This article explores civic learning, civic participation, and the development of civic agency withi...
The purpose of this study was to explore development of civic participation in children in primary g...
Given the current challenges facing our democracy in the United States, the role of public schools i...
This article is a response to “This is What Democracy Looks Like: Some Thoughts on Democratic School...