
International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education
Editors: A/Prof John Lidstone, Queensland University of Technology and Prof Joseph P. Stoltman, Western Michigan University Book Review Editor: Dr Sarah Witham Bednarz, Texas A & M University Editorial Assistant: Donna Bennett, Australia

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Volume: 10 Number: 2 Page: 114126
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Moral Dilemmas, Narrative and the Teaching of Geography
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Michael McPartland
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This paper applies an endsmeans framework devised for the identification and classification of values in geographical education to the topic of migration, as presented in a popular Key Stage 3 geography
textbook used in schools in England and Wales, in order to highlight the values implicit in the treatment of the topic. It then examines the relationship between those values and moral values and argues
that the moral aspects of migration are not made explicit in the textbook. It claims that one reason for this relates to the dominance of exposition as a type of discourse and makes, and justifies, the
assertion that narrative as a type of discourse facilitates the examination of the moral dimension to many of the topics taught in geography. This is especially true when narrative is used to convey the
moral dilemmas embedded in many topics in geography. The relationship between moral dilemmas and the prevailing paradigms of moral education is described. The paper concludes by suggesting, briefly, three
ways in which moral dilemmas can be presented in the classroom.
© Multilingual Matters 2001


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