In this longitudinal case study, Catherine Compton‐Lilly and Margaret R. Hawkins explore one immigrant youth’s engagement with transglobal activities and flows of information and his emerging awareness of the world. Contending that transglobal flows create learning opportunities that are rarely available to children raised in mononational and monocultural spaces, the authors add to scholarship that highlights the knowledge, awareness, understandings, and literacies that children in transglobal families bring to class rooms. Specifically, they examine twelve years of longitudinal data following the youth’s development of a critical cosmopolitan stance and then apply a transliteracies framework to analyze complementary facets of emergence, uptake, resonance, and scale implicated in transglobal relations and comparisons. The article closes with recommendations for educational practice.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Spring 2023
Research Article|
April 12 2023
Global Flows and Critical Cosmopolitanism: A Longitudinal Case Study
CATHERINE COMPTON-LILLY;
CATHERINE COMPTON-LILLY
University of South Carolina
Search for other works by this author on:
MARGARET R. HAWKINS
MARGARET R. HAWKINS
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Search for other works by this author on:
Harvard Educational Review (2023) 93 (1): 26–52.
Citation
CATHERINE COMPTON-LILLY, MARGARET R. HAWKINS; Global Flows and Critical Cosmopolitanism: A Longitudinal Case Study. Harvard Educational Review 1 March 2023; 93 (1): 26–52. doi: https://doi.org/10.17763/1943-5045-93.1.26
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your Institution
61
Views
Citing articles via
Distracting, Erasing, and Othering: A Critical Analysis of the Teachers Pay Teachers’ Teach for Justice Collection
KATY SWALWELL<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>NOREEN NASEEM RODRÍGUEZ<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>AMY UPDEGRAFF<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>LESLIE ANN WINTERS
Public Goods, Private Goods, and School Preferences
LESLIE K. FINGER<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>DAVID M. HOUSTON
Norms of Convivencia as Practices of Abjection: Saving the Nation by Saving the Muslim Girl
BELÉN HERNANDO-LLORÉNS
Global Flows and Critical Cosmopolitanism: A Longitudinal Case Study
CATHERINE COMPTON-LILLY<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>MARGARET R. HAWKINS
Cancel Wars: How Universities Can Foster Free Speech, Promote Inclusion, and Renew Democracy, by Sigal R. Ben-Porath, Algorithms of Education: How Datafication and Artificial Intelligence Shape Policy, by Kalervo N. Gulson, Sam Sellar, and P. Taylor Webb, Right Where We Belong: How Refugee Teachers and Students Are Changing the Future of Education, by Sarah Dryden-Peterson
Megan L. Bogia<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>Abhinav Ghosh<span class='al-author-delim'>, </span>Santiago Pulido-Gómez