2016
DOI: 10.1080/10564934.2016.1223977
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Revisiting Pasts, Reimagining Futures: Memories of (Post)Socialist Childhood and Schooling

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, educational scientists from the former socialist bloc – for example, the pedagogical work of Kairov, Krupskaya and Makarenko (Sáska, 2008) from the Soviet Union – considered political education as crucial for their societies. By teaching a practical and collective life – working in socialist factories during the summer, picking fruit for a week during school time, participating in pioneer groups, doing good deeds for the collective, participating in demonstrations, and so on – they focused on developing politically aware socialist individuals (Aydarova et al, 2016). On the other side of the Iron Curtain, from the 1950s to the 1970s, the first major sweep of research to explore children’s political lives focused on political learning as a form of socialization or the learning of norms (Connell, 1987).…”
Section: Children’s Profoundly Political Livesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, educational scientists from the former socialist bloc – for example, the pedagogical work of Kairov, Krupskaya and Makarenko (Sáska, 2008) from the Soviet Union – considered political education as crucial for their societies. By teaching a practical and collective life – working in socialist factories during the summer, picking fruit for a week during school time, participating in pioneer groups, doing good deeds for the collective, participating in demonstrations, and so on – they focused on developing politically aware socialist individuals (Aydarova et al, 2016). On the other side of the Iron Curtain, from the 1950s to the 1970s, the first major sweep of research to explore children’s political lives focused on political learning as a form of socialization or the learning of norms (Connell, 1987).…”
Section: Children’s Profoundly Political Livesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some cases, educational researchers have turned their attention to memory, highlighting the importance, for example, of autobiography, oral history and narrative methodologies in challenging dominant constructions of the past and dominant neoliberal educational prescriptions (e.g. Aydarova et al, 2016;Harding & Gabriel, 2011), or proposing pedagogical interventions that, like the approach outlined in the introduction, actively embrace the construction of memory (e.g. Corredor et al, 2018).…”
Section: Schools Nationalism and Narratives Of Ethnic Conflictmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The problem is the tendency towards explanations that are binary rather than relational (Silova et al, 2017). This often limits what can be seen but more importantly, dualistic thinking tends to position one side, usually the Western, as ‘better’ (Aydarova et al, 2016; Carney et al, 2012). When cheating occurs it will often be explained by way of self-identification as a culture of degraded values and prevalent corruption, as Croatian teachers (Štambuk et al, 2016) and some East European scholars (e.g.…”
Section: Test Cheating In Post-socialist Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%