This book explores how Australian secondary schools prepare their
students for global citizenship. Globalisation has irrevocably changed
modern countries and societies, and the benefits and pressures this
brings are being felt as never before. Drawing on empirical data from
six Australian secondary schools, the author examines how school leaders
and teachers understand global citizenship, how they translate this into
their practice, and how students experience and make sense of global
citizenship education. In doing so, the book portrays how school
leaders, teachers and students grapple with key issues central to global
citizenship education, including how they work to mediate some of the
tensions involved. While the book concentrates on the Australian
context, its findings and analysis have resonance for other countries in
which global citizenship education operates as a core goal of education
and schooling.