Addressing controversial issues in religious education by enacting and rehearsing democracy through Forum Theatre: student perspectives
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Date
2023Metadata
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Abstract
Both policy and research emphasise the significant role that addressing
controversial issues plays in democracy and citizenship education.
However, less work has examined what forms of democratic learning are
promoted when controversial issues are addressed in specific ways. This
article is rooted in action research and, through an analysis of student
perspectives, explores the potential for democratic learning when Forum
Theatre (FT) is used to address controversial issues in religious education
(RE). FT facilitates critical democratic education; hence, it centres on power
asymmetries, empowerment and transformation. The findings indicate that
this critical pedagogical approach empowers students to become political
and moral agents in the search for nonoppressive solutions and that FT
promotes education both through and for democracy. However, an explicit
goal in FT and critical pedagogy is to critically examine the interconnected-
ness between micro-oppressions and macro-structures. This was not
achieved in the FT exercises in this study: this article discusses the possible
reasons for this result, along with recommendations for further reinventions
of FT in the context of RE, controversial issues and democratic learning.