JSSE - Journal of Social Science Education https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse <p>The Journal of Social Science Education (JSSE) is an international peer-reviewed academic open access journal in the area of research on teaching and learning in the field of social science education.</p> en-US info@jsse.org (Editors of the Journal of Social Science Education) filipa.cesar@jsse.org (Filipa César) Mon, 15 Apr 2024 10:29:56 +0000 OJS 3.3.0.13 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Situationality in teaching controversial topics: (When) does controversial equal difficult? https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/6754 <ul> <li>Most teachers in the Netherlands do not report difficulty in discussing the most controversial topics. Anti-muslimism, COVID vaccination, and integration of ethnic minorities are perceived as relatively difficult topics to discuss.</li> <li>High teacher self-efficacy and school support are related to reported ease in discussing all controversial topics.</li> <li>Specific controversial topics are considered more challenging to discuss in diverse classrooms in terms of SES and ethnicity.</li> <li>Controversial topics are perceived as more difficult to discuss in vocational educational tracks.</li> </ul> <p><strong>Purpose: </strong>This study examines what controversial topics teachers in the Netherlands perceive as difficult to discuss and if and how this difficulty is related to teachers’ background characteristics and context characteristics.</p> <p><strong>Methodology: </strong>1034 secondary school teachers filled in an online questionnaire, and structural equation modelling (SEM) was used to explore the relationships among variables.</p> <p><strong>Findings: </strong>The findings indicate that recent topics with a direct large impact on students’ lives and society, like COVID vaccination, are perceived as most difficult to discuss. With more perceived school support and high self-efficacy teachers report more ease to discuss controversial topics. Yet, reported difficulty to discussing controversial topics is also partially context- and person-specific, involving (among others) classroom composition, school subject and teacher’s age.</p> <p><strong>Practical implications: </strong>This study can inform the development of subject and context-specific teaching materials and training programs in civic and democratic education.</p> Bjorn Gert-Jan Wansink, Mikhail Mogutov, Koen Damhuis, Larike Henriette Bronkhorst Copyright (c) 2024 JSSE - Journal of Social Science Education https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/6754 Mon, 15 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000