Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-2009
Abstract
This study evaluated the potential utility of teachers’ volunteer service-learning experiences abroad to change the perceptions and actions of North American students toward cultural others. A team of Canadian teachers working with local children in the Dominican Republic used the literacy intervention Authors in the Classroom program to guide these children in authoring identity texts about themselves and their families. These multi-layered texts are discussed with emphasis on the children’s understanding of their social situation. The teachers later shared these texts with a group of Canadian Grade 8 students and had them produce their own texts. The Canadian students showed a range of depth in their understanding of the lives of impoverished children, as well as a range of responses toward action for social justice.
Recommended Citation
Bernhard, Judith K.; Evans, Lisa; Marmolejo, Yohannys; and Cosentino, Teresa, "Using Teachers’ Volunteer Experiences in the Dominican Republic to Develop Social Responsibility in Canadian Middle-School Students: An ‘Authors in the Classroom’ Approach" (2009). Early Childhood Education Publications and Research. Paper 29.
http://digitalcommons.ryerson.ca/ece/29

Comments
Online version of an article originally published as:
Using Teachers’ Volunteer Experiences in the Dominican Republic to Develop Social Responsibility in Canadian Middle-School Students: An ‘Authors in the Classroom’ Approach. Interamerican Journal of Education for Democracy. Vol 2, No 2 (2009).
Publisher URL: http://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/ried/article/view/161