Resources for Researchers

 
Syrian refugee camp in Turkey. Photo: European Union 2016 - European Parliament. (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.) No changes made. bit.ly/2P1iNM0

Syrian refugee camp in Turkey. Photo: European Union 2016 - European Parliament. (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.) No changes made. bit.ly/2P1iNM0

How can research foster welcoming communities and quality education in settings of migration and displacement?

Our research focuses on the experiences of teachers and students in schools. We seek to understand the ways that politics and policies interact with processes of teaching and learning in classrooms. We research how classroom pedagogy, curricular content, and relationships can build inclusion and belonging, with implications for both individuals and communities. We work collaboratively with teachers, students, civil society organizations, governments, and international agencies. These long-term collaborative relationships help us to ask relevant research questions and to contribute to policy and program decisions.

 
 

Doing Research Amid Pandemic

Video

Experiences of uncertainty, both the immediate and the long-term, push us to center principles of predictability, adaptability, relationships, and future-building as we design research for equity that long outlives crisis and dismantles the structures and power relations that create and exacerbate it.

Sarah Dryden-Peterson and students Esther Elonga, Martha Franco, Orelia Jonathan, and Kristia Wantchekon discuss how they use these principles in their research amid multiple pandemics of Covid-19 and racism.

Click here to watch the recording.

 
 

The Futures of Education for Participation in 2050

By Vidur Chopra & Helen Haste

Background Paper

Read The futures of education for participation in 2050: educating for managing uncertainty and ambiguity by Helen Haste & Vidur Chopra (2020). This paper was commissioned for the UNESCO Futures of Education report.

In this background paper, the authors argue that developing the capacities to manage ambiguity and change are critical to enabling membership and participation within societies in the future. They draw on three examples: migration, communication, and technology, and the ruptures brought about by climate change to illustrate key ideas about the management of change through education.

 
 

Civic Education and the Education of Refugees

By Sarah Dryden-Peterson

Special Issue

Read Civic education and the education of refugees by Sarah Dryden-Peterson (2020) in Intercultural Education.

Refugee REACH founder and director Sarah Dryden-Peterson explores the civic education of refugees within the context of a radical global policy shift to include refugees in national education systems. She argues that such a shift has promoted structural inclusion of refugees in national schooling but has not adequately engaged with the relational processes of inclusion.

This essay is part of Intercultural Education's Special Issue on global migration and civic education.

 
 
 

 

Additional Resources