Children´s Rights in Schools : from International Initiatives to Local Implementation (original) (raw)
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1998
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child affirms that every child has a right to education. The purpose of education is to enable the child to develop to his or her fullest possible potential and to learn respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. The general principles of the Convention which are relevant to education cover non-discrimination, the best interests of the child, the child’s right to life, survival and development, and the child’s right to express opinions. These principles can serve as a useful instrument in discussions on how to reform schools. This paper analyses, in the light of the Convention, eight areas for progressive reform: universal access, equal opportunities, the appropriate content of education, cultural roots and global values, new methods of learning, mutual respect, pupil participation, and the role of teachers, parents and the community. It also examines the problems both of implementing and of paying for such reform. The author concludes ...
Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2008
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is presented and understood as the primary reference point regarding questions of children's rights. However, the UNCRC is not a neutral instrument deployed to meet the rights of children: it embodies a specific perception of the child, childhood and citizenship. The interpretation of the UNCRC from the point of view of children's legal status emphasises the autonomy of children; the focus is on the rights that children possess. Conversely, the social-political interpretation of the UNCRC addresses the question of how the rights of children can be realised. It is suggested that distinguishing between these interpretations is essential with regard to questions of pedagogy and education.
Children’s Rights-Based Approach in Education: Experiences from Scattered Initiatives
2016
In the society, the culture of which gives high value on hierarchy and emphasis on the children’s obligation, raising the issue of children’s rights may be considered as impolite by the standard of the culture. Teachers having such a cultural background may show some resistance to the implementation of the Convention in their schools. This paper deals with an alternative of implementing the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child by using the children’s rights-based approach in education. The study showed that teachers in public schools tend to be more conservative than in private schools.
2016
Citation for published version (APA): Rasmusson, B., Andersson, L., Wångdahl Flinck, A., Leo, U., & Wickenberg, P. (2016). Looking back and looking forward. In B. Rasmusson, L. Andersson, A. W. Flinck, U. Leo, & P. Wickenberg (Eds.), Realising Child Rights in Education: Experience and Reflections from the International Training Programme on Child Rights, Classroom and School Management (1 ed., Vol. 1, pp. 217-225). Lund: Lund University.
2012
In 2003 Lund University Commissioned Education was given the task, after publictender, to create and administrate a programme on “Child Rights, Classroom andSchool Management” following the provisions and principles contained in the UNConvention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Sida’s development policy on Education and other internationally ratified instruments in the areas of child rights and education. The programme was oriented to target persons holding a position from where they could initiate processes of change in their home countries. During the years 2003-2009 the International Training Programme (ITP) on Child Rights, Classroom and School Management was arranged 11 times with 330 participants completing it. Most of them are still working for child rights in their countries and have formed national and regional networks. In 2010 Lund University Commissioned Education won the contract in a new procurement for arranging the programme twice a year 2010 - 2012 with an option f...