Abstract
This paper considers the construction of young people’s experiences in city schools
through a new curriculum subject, Citizenship Education, in secondary schools in
England. It demonstrates how citizen identities are constructed through discursive
practices in the classroom and are shaped by geographies of education. The placebased
identities formed within urban schools both refl ect and refute the inequalities
inherent in the selective education system which pertains in many UK cities today.
A discussion of the urban context in which the research was undertaken is followed
by an analysis of empirical research in two schools in and around Bristol, south-west
England. This explores the ways in which particular place-based subjectivities are
actively and knowingly enacted by teachers and pupils in the classroom through their
talk about what constitutes the ideal citizen.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 803-823 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Urban Studies |
Publication status | Published - Apr 2009 |