RETHINKING TEACHER EDUCATION THROUGH GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION - A GROUNDBREAKING APPROACH TO LGBTQIA+ INCLUSION IN AN ITALIAN CONTEXT
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Date
2025-08-11
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Abstract
Aim:
The study aims to examine how newly qualified secondary school
teachers in Humanities and Literary Disciplines, who completed their
training at a university in north-eastern Italy, perceive their preparedness
to address LGBTQIA+ topics in the classroom. It also investigates their
views on how Global Citizenship Education can serve as a framework to
promote LGBTQIA+ inclusion and what changes they recommend in
teacher education to better support inclusive pedagogies.
Theory:
The research draws on Judith Butler’s Queer Theory—particularly her
concepts of gender performativity, precariousness, and the heterosexual
matrix—and Pierre Bourdieu’s critical sociology, focusing on habitus,
symbolic violence, field, and capital. The integration of these theories
enables a dual focus on how normative discourses and institutional
structures shape (and constrain) teachers’ practices and identities.
Method:
The study adopts a qualitative approach based on in-depth,
semi-structured interviews with seven newly qualified secondary
teachers in Humanities disciplines. Interviews were conducted in person
or online and analysed through thematic content analysis using NVivo. A
non-probability sampling strategy combining convenience and snowball
sampling was employed to recruit participants.
Results:
Participants reported a widespread absence of structured training on
LGBTQIA+ inclusion within their teacher education programmes. They
described feelings of unpreparedness, institutional silence, and fear of
parental or administrative backlash. However, many showed personal
commitment and engaged in self-directed learning. The results highlight
how geography, school type, and institutional culture shape inclusion
efforts. Teachers identified Global Citizenship Education as a potentially
valuable but underutilised framework, calling for its integration into
formal curricula to support equity, diversity, and human rights.
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Keywords
Global Citizenship Education (GCED); LGBTQIA+; Teacher education; Teacher training; Queer Theory