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EDUCATION FOR TOMORROW'S WORLD

Past Program

Nov 14 - Nov 19, 2023 S812-01

Civic and Civil Education: Identity, Belonging and Education in the 21st Century

OVERVIEW

Democracy is stagnating or declining in many parts of the world and conflict is increasing. The spread of misinformation continues to rise, leading to an erosion of trust, which was particularly egregious during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many societies and communities are becoming increasingly polarized and fractured, with new fault lines emerging along identity lines.

K-12 and higher education has an important role to play in addressing these issues. Schools can normalize democratic practices, help young people develop the skills and the mindset to understand the difference between fact and opinion, and help them learn how to disagree agreeably, or find points of contact and empathy. As momentum around a global education transformation agenda continues to build there is a unique opportunity to rethink the role education can play in supporting citizens with the skills and behaviors to thrive and live harmoniously in our complex 21st century societies.

People
Partners
PROGRAM INFO
Citizenship Forum
Lecture
PROGRAM INSIGHTS
Related News
Participants
Jennifer Adams
Chair of the Board of Governors, University of Ottawa, Canada
Paulina Arango
Learning and Reserach Leader, San José de Las Vegas School, Colombia
Sungyou Bae
Innovation Advisor, Innovation Centre Denmark, South Korea
Seun Bakare
Chief Executive Officer, The Leicester LGBT Centre, United Kingdom
Barbara Bullard
President and CEO, Shirley Chisholm Cultural Institute, USA
Catalina Chacon
Future Rising Prgram Manager, Girl Rising, Nicaragua
Valeriia Chernysh
Program Associate, Education, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
Utak Chung
Representative of Korea, Global Partnership for Education, South Korea
Julie Colligan
Educator, Noroton Presbyterian Nursery School, USA
Felix Dade
Former Student, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Jack Davies
Senior Manager, World's Largest Lesson, United Kingdom
Sue Egersdorff
Charity Founder, Ready Generations. United Kingdom
Linda Exenberger
COO, YEP - Youth Empowerment & Participation, Austria
Gloria Figueroa
General Director, San Jose de las Vegas School, Colombia
Daniela Graf
High School Teacher, SALIS (Salzburg International School), Austria
Ulrike Greiner
University Professor, University of Salzburg, Austria
Philipp Harnik
Programs Officer, Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens, Austria
Simone Jordan
Advisor, Division for Democracy Education, Parliamentary Administration of the Austrian Parliament, Austria
Kristina Kaihari
Counsellor of Education, Finnish National Agency for Education, Finland
Tamara Kamatovic
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, CEU, Austria
Mahawa Koroma
Radical Inclusion Consultant, Ministry of Basic and Senior Secondary School, Sierra Leone
Fredrik Lindencrona
Head of Research Co-Creation, Inner Development Goals, Sweden
Catherine Millett
Director of the ETS Global Academy, Senior Research Scientist and Strategic Advisor, ETS, USA
Shevika Mishra
Founder, Kuviraa India, India
Liz Moorse
Chief Executive, Association for Citizenship Teaching, United Kingdom
Haydar Muntadhar
Countering Violent Extremism Expert, United Kingdom
Corinna Nawatzky
Program Manager, Center for Education Transformation, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
Marlon Julian Nombrado
Co-founder, Out of The Box Media Literacy Initiative, Philippines
Julia Pataky
Education Outreach Coordinator, US Embassy Vienna, Austria
Shaireen Rasheed
Professor of Philosophy, Education and Social Justice, Long Island University, USA
Amisa Rashid Ahmed
Founder and Executive Director, Nivishe Foundation, Kenya
Dominic Regester
Director, Education, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
Jessica Roberts
Assistant Professor, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal
Sophiyat Sadiq
Program Intern, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
Nina Schnider
Co-Founder, Demokratie21 & relevant.news, Austria
Stephan Schweighofer
Research Associate, University of Salzburg, Austria
Hyeyoung Shin
PhD Candidate, National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Otago, New Zealand
Litha Sokutu
Cultural Analyst; Director, SLC Associates, Cape Town, South Africa
Samantha Stanley
Associate Director of Research and Program Managem
Aferdita Sylaj Sehu
Executive Director, Community Building Mitrovica, Kosovo
Marcin Szala
Co-Founder, Liceum Artes Liberales, Poland
Teresa Torzicky
Head of Unit, Innovationsstiftung für Bildung, Austria
Chisom Udeze
Founder, Diversify, Norway
Mario Vasilescu
CEO & Co-Founder, Readocracy, Canada
Martha Wambui
Executive Director, She's Afrique Hub, Kenya
Joel Westheimer
University Research Chair in Democracy and Education, University of Ottawa, Canada
Penelope Ögüt
Manager, Operations and Organizational Development, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
PARTNERS
OVERVIEW

Democracy is stagnating or declining in many parts of the world and conflict is increasing. The spread of misinformation continues to rise, leading to an erosion of trust, which was particularly egregious during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many societies and communities are becoming increasingly polarized and fractured, with new fault lines emerging along identity lines.

K-12 and higher education has an important role to play in addressing these issues. Schools can normalize democratic practices, help young people develop the skills and the mindset to understand the difference between fact and opinion, and help them learn how to disagree agreeably, or find points of contact and empathy. As momentum around a global education transformation agenda continues to build there is a unique opportunity to rethink the role education can play in supporting citizens with the skills and behaviors to thrive and live harmoniously in our complex 21st century societies.

PROGRAM STRUCTURE

The hybrid program will build new insights and aggregate perspectives and experiences from relevant sectors, areas of expertise, and regions. Thematic working groups will prepare recommendations for action. As participants you can expect to:

EXPERIENCE

  • A candid, safe and open exchange with peers under the Chatham House Rule.
  • Time and space to disconnect and reflect from a wider ecosystem perspective.

GAIN

  • Connection to an active international community of outstanding leaders working on this topic.
  • Inspiration and learning from across the world and foresight into directions for future work.
  • Relationships for coalition building across organizational, professional and national boundaries.
  • Access to a vast network of Salzburg Global Fellows working on similar pursuits.

GIVE AND RECEIVE

  • Promising practices, and drawon the group’s collective intelligence and experience to tackle challenges you face and leverage important opportunities.
  • Opportunities for peer mentoring on ways to incubate, replicate, adapt and scale good practices.
FORMAT

This highly interactive, hybrid program will bring together 50 participants from across the globe for two online sessions and a four and half-day residential program at Schloss Leopoldskron, home of Salzburg Global Seminar, in Salzburg, Austria.

  • 1st Online Meeting – October 25, 2023, 15.00 to 16.30 CET
  • 2nd Online Meeting – November 6, 2023, 15.00 to 16.30 CET
  • In-person program – November 14 (from 15:00) to 19 (departure), 2023
  • Online engagement through 2024 (cadence to be decided by group).
KEY QUESTIONS

The program will address a wide range of key questions, including:

  • How can education normalize and support democratic practices?
  • How are schools and universities helping students develop critical thinking skills to distinguish between fact and opinion?
  • How does the experience of school help students develop their own sense of identity?
  • What are the skills needed to disagree agreeably?
  • What might a curriculum for activists look like?
  • Does language learning help with the development of empathy?
  • Which systems are already offering models for the future?
PARTICIPATION PROFILE

Salzburg Global Seminar’s Education for Tomorrow’s World programs bring together cross-sector and intergenerational change-makers to tackle complex challenges. This program will involve policymakers, civil society, researchers, school leaders, youth leaders, innovators and stakeholders from around the world who are engaged in civic and civil education.

PROGRAM GOALS

The online sessions will contribute to the design and focus of the in-person program and begin the process of collaboration. The in-person program will produce a Statement or Manifesto to contribute to the expanding literature on the role that education can play in developing skills, behaviors and mindsets that support diverse ideas about citizenship and civic mindedness. Participants will also be invited to contribute to an essay collection on the topic. The specific nature of additional outcomes will be decided collectively by the program participants and then co-created.

International Forum on Global Citizenship Education

Tuesday, November 14, 8.30am to 1pm

On the sidelines of the Civic and Civil Education program, the Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens, the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Korea to the UN in Vienna and Salzburg Global Seminar hosted an International Forum on Global Citizenship Education on 14 November 2023 at Schloss Leopoldskron in Salzburg, Austria.

The forum brought together key decision-makers and knowledge experts to exchange opinions, share best-practice examples of global citizenship in action and present a path forward in the educational sector. The event offered a timely exchange on current successes and challenges in Global Citizenship Education and on the role of education in an age of climate change and artificial intelligence.

Following a high-level opening ceremony, including remarks by Dr. Heinz Fischer, 11th Federal President of Austria and Co-chair of the BKMC, H.E. Claudia Plakolm, Austrian Youth State Secretary and H.E. Ham Sangwook, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Korea to the UN in Vienna, and a keynote by former CEO of the European Institute of Technology Prof. Willem Jonker, three parallel moderated panels featuring high-level international speakers illustrated the most important developments on Global Citizenship Education.

The sessions' topics were:

  1. Developments in policy making for GCED in the age of AI and climate change
  2. Universities and higher education - GCED challenges and success stories from Universities around the world
  3. Young changemakers action - Best practice examples from young global citizens

After the parallel panel sessions, a plenary reunion will provide an opportunity to take stock and forecast the next steps in GCED.

Watch the highlights of the International Forum on Global Citizenship Education below:

 

Images of the event are available for download via Flickr. Please credit BKMC/ Christian Streili.

Empathy and Community as Antidotes to Misinformation

Salzburg Global Center for Education Transformation Lecture - Thursday, November 16, 5.30pm to 7pm

Solutions to the challenge of misinformation have tended to focus on making journalism more transparent or credible, doing more fact-checking, or teaching audiences media literacy skills. An overlooked area of emphasis is the emotional well-being and connectedness of the audience, and how building up community and cultivating empathy within audiences can lead them to be more committed to finding shared sets of facts to build consensus, and thus less susceptible to misinformation and its negative effects.

Jessica Roberts is an assistant professor of communication studies in the Faculty of Human Sciences at the Universidade Católica Portuguesa. She is co-author of the 2018 book, American journalism and "fake news": Examining the facts, and her research on citizen journalism and social media has been published in Journalism and the International Journal of Communication, among other publications. Roberts earned her Ph.D. at the University of Maryland and her M.A. at the University of Southern California.

This lecture was part of an annual public lecture series organized by the Salzburg Global Center for Education Transformation. The 2023 lecture was kindly supported by the US Embassy in Vienna and was delivered as part of Salzburg Global's Civic and Civil Education: Identity, Belonging and Education in the 21st Century program.

Watch the recording of the lecture below:

PHOTOS


View full set on Flickr

All images are available for download. Please credit Salzburg Global Seminar/Christian Streili. Unwatermarked images are available on request.