Article type: Original Research
1 December 2011
Volume 36 Issue 4
Article type: Original Research
1 December 2011
Volume 36 Issue 4
The Diverse Practice of Social Pedagogues: Case Examples From Denmark, Scotland, and Germany
Christina Surel1
Sarah Douglas2
Andy Finley3
Alexandra Priver4
Affiliations
1
2
3
4
Contributions
Christina Surel -
Sarah Douglas -
Andy Finley -
Alexandra Priver -
Christina Surel1
Sarah Douglas2
Andy Finley3
Alexandra Priver4
Affiliations
1
2
3
4
CITATION: Surel C., Douglas S., Finley A., & Priver A. (2011). The Diverse Practice of Social Pedagogues: Case Examples From Denmark, Scotland, and Germany. Children Australia, 36(4), 1809. doi.org/10.1375/jcas.36.4.219
Abstract
As a holistic way of working with children and young people to develop their learning and wellbeing, their inter-and independence, social pedagogy is widely practised across many European countries. While the ways in which it is practiced will differ — depending on the cultural context and setting — there are also common threads that connect the social pedagogic traditions found in several countries. Hämäläinen (2003) suggests that ‘social pedagogy has a certain perspective of its own [which] cannot be reduced to a set of simple pedagogical methods, but should be understood as an educational orientation in which the world, people, society, social problems and social work are observed through “social pedagogical” glasses, as it were’ (p. 76).