TY - JOUR
T1 - Educación para el futuro
T2 - Currículo y prácticas educativas en Australia, España y Chile
AU - Santos, Rodrigo
AU - Marolla Gajardo, Jesús
AU - Castellví, Jordi
AU - Escribano, Carmen
N1 - Apoyos:
Proyecto RedUNIR ‘El uso de las redes sociales genéricas en el ámbito docente: retos formativos para el contexto educativo actual’ de la Universidad Internacional de la Rioja (España); Departamento de Historia y Geografía de la Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación (Chile).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. Comunicar. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2022/10/1
Y1 - 2022/10/1
N2 - The images of the future among young people have been conditioned by the stories present in the media, films, books, and also in school. Educational curriculums are made up of a selection of knowledge that privileges some ways of understanding the future over others. Young people often imagine a future that is in economic, social, and/or climate crisis. However, they also imagine a bright future for themselves, detached from the future they imagine for society. In this article, we present a qualitative analysis of the curriculums of Australia, Spain, and Chile, together with interviews with teachers from these countries. We investigate the presence and absence of futures education in these curriculums, their degree of development regarding futures education, and make a first analysis of the influence of futures education in schools. To do this we identify four dimensions: situate in time, anticipate, imagine alternative futures, and social action. The results show that, while the Australian curriculum explicitly includes education for the future, the Spanish and Chilean curriculum include it only tangentially. In addition, the socio-cultural context of schools and the will of the teaching staff are elements that determine the implementation of futures education in the school context.
AB - The images of the future among young people have been conditioned by the stories present in the media, films, books, and also in school. Educational curriculums are made up of a selection of knowledge that privileges some ways of understanding the future over others. Young people often imagine a future that is in economic, social, and/or climate crisis. However, they also imagine a bright future for themselves, detached from the future they imagine for society. In this article, we present a qualitative analysis of the curriculums of Australia, Spain, and Chile, together with interviews with teachers from these countries. We investigate the presence and absence of futures education in these curriculums, their degree of development regarding futures education, and make a first analysis of the influence of futures education in schools. To do this we identify four dimensions: situate in time, anticipate, imagine alternative futures, and social action. The results show that, while the Australian curriculum explicitly includes education for the future, the Spanish and Chilean curriculum include it only tangentially. In addition, the socio-cultural context of schools and the will of the teaching staff are elements that determine the implementation of futures education in the school context.
KW - Primary education
KW - Futures education
KW - Secondary education
KW - Critical thinking.
KW - Curriculum
KW - Acting socially
UR - https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=8525011
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135002904&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3916/C73-2022-04
DO - 10.3916/C73-2022-04
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85135002904
SN - 1134-3478
VL - 30
SP - 45
EP - 55
JO - Comunicar
JF - Comunicar
IS - 73
ER -