This term describes seeing your actions as connected to people around the world
What is global citizenship?
This term describes how some groups hold more influence or control than others.
What is power?
Critical literacy involves reading the word and the __.
What is world?
Every person sees the world through their own cultural __.
What is lens or perspective?
Before taking action, learners must first develop this skill.
What is critical thinking?
A "soft approach to global citizenship often focuses on mainly on this emotion.
What is empathy or charity?
Wealth and poverty worldwide are connected through these global systems.
What are global economic systems/ supply chains?
Critical literacy teaches learners to analyze the relationships between language and __.
What is power?
Engaging with different viewpoints helps us challenge our own __.
What are assumptions?
Acting globally responsibly means considering both short term and __ effects.
What are long-term effects?
True global citizenship requires understanding not just issues, but how we might be __ in them.
What is complicit?
When one culture or county assumes its values are superior, this occurs.
What is cultural dominance?
Instead of right or wrong, critical literacy looks at these two things behind ideas.
What are assumptions and implications?
When one worldview is treated as universal, it can erase others, leading to this.
What is marginalization?
Effective action must analyze whose voice are included and whose are __.
What is excluded or silenced?
This kind of perspective recognizes that global issues are tied to history, politics, and structures.
What is a critical or systemic perspective?
Focusing on helping others without questioning root causes often reinforces this mindset?
What is the saviour mentality?
Recognizing that knowledge is shaped by our culture and experiences means it is always __.
What is partial or incomplete?
Understanding others requires acknowledging our own __ in society.
What is privilege?
Ethical global citizenship avoids imposing solutions because it respects everyone's right to __.
What is signify or define meaning for themselves?
Some people can act globally while others are acted upon; this describes what king of inequality?
What is unequal power in globalization?
Ignoring how colonial history shapes today's inequalities is an example of this.
What is historical amnesia or "sanctioned ignorance"?
Critical literacy creates space for students to think otherwise, in other words, to __ their perspectives.
What is transform or rethink?
The idea that the West defines what "modern" or "normal" means reflects this global phenomenon.
What is the western gaze/ global cultural dominance?
Taking action without analyzing power or consequences risks unintentionally doing this.
What is reproducing harm or inequality?