Children’s human rights
education refers to education and educational practices in schools and
educational institutions that are consistent with the United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the Child. It is a form of education that takes seriously
the view that children are bearers of human rights, that children are citizens
in their own right, that schools and educational institutions are learning
communities where children learn (or fail to learn) the values and practices of
human rights and citizenship, and that educating children about their own basic
human rights is a legal obligation of the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
Children's rights
education is education where the rights of the child, as described in the
Convention, is taught and practiced in individual classrooms. But in its most
developed form, children’s rights are taught and practiced in a systematic and
comprehensive way across grade levels, across the school, and across school
districts. With full-blown children’s rights education, children’s rights are
not simply an addition to a particular subject or classroom. Rather, the rights
of the child are incorporated into the school curricula, teaching practices,
and teaching materials across subjects and grade levels and are the centerpiece
of school mission statements, behavior codes, and school policies and
practices.
Fully developed
children’s rights education means that all members of the school community
receive education on the rights of the child. The Convention serves as a values
framework for the life and functioning of the school or educational institution
and for efforts to promote a more positive school climate and school culture
for learning.
A core belief in
children’s rights education is that when children learn about their own basic
human rights, this learning serves as an important foundation for their understanding
and support of human rights more broadly.
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