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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_BV047463557
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 237 Seiten) : , Illustrationen.
    ISBN: 978-3-030-74266-9
    Series Statement: Contributions from science education research volume 8
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74265-2
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74267-6
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74268-3
    Language: English
    Keywords: Naturwissenschaftlicher Unterricht ; Außerschulische Bildung
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9948664883102882
    Format: 1 online resource (175 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453915271
    Series Statement: [Re]thinking Environmental Education 8
    Content: Rethinking Intercultural Approaches to Indigenous Environmental Education and Research arose from a physical and philosophical journey that critically considered the relationship between Western, Indigenous, and other culturally rooted ecological knowledge systems and philosophies. This book shares two related studies that explored the life histories, cultural, and ecological identities and pedagogical experiences of Indigenous, non-Indigenous, and recently arrived educators and learners from across Canada. A variety of socio-ecological concepts including bricolage, métissage, Two-Eyed Seeing, and the Third Space are employed to (re-) frame discussions of historical and contemporary understandings of interpretive and Indigenous research methodologies, Métis cultures and identities, Canadian ecological identity, intercultural science and environmental education, «wicked problems», contemporary disputes over land and natural resource management, and related activism.
    Content: «This book offers in-depth discussions that will appeal to a wide audience.» Adam Vincent, JCACS Vol. 14, No. 1/2016)
    Content: «The empowerment teachings and practices by Indigenous peoples the world over today are especially crucial to the dawning hope for more sustainable knowledge and respectful relationships with the land and its many inhabitants. Here, Gregory Lowan-Trudeau generously theorizes, documents, and himself provides the ways in which Indigenous Environmental Education constitutes a form of integral educational leadership that is at once extremely timely and creatively emergent, but on the other hand deeply traditional and based in the long-standing understandings that can only emerge from careful partnership with nature in all of its biocultural diversity-in-place. In this, the book importantly bridges communities and scholarly debates, and I'm honored to support it as a pathway forward. For sure, this is a necessary text that every critical environmental educator and ecopedagogue should both listen to and from which they can learn.» (Richard Kahn, PhD, Core Faculty in Education, Antioch University Los Angeles)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433122354
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433122361
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9949701907402882
    Format: 1 online resource.
    ISBN: 9789460911613
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Content: As more attention is devoted to the increasing and complex socio-ecological issues facing the planet, new insights and new ways of thinking are being sought about the learning and agency of children and adults in relation to these environmental concerns. The contributors to this book address the critically important dual challenge of making environmental education engaging while engaging individuals, institutions and communities. Rather than treating students and citizens as passive recipients of other people's knowledge, the book highlights the importance of engaging learners as active agents in thinking about and constructing a more sustainable and equitable quality of life. The case studies emphasize socio-cultural approaches to environmental learning within and outside formal education in a diverse range of international contexts, including Canada, Denmark, Korea, the Netherlands, South Africa, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. The authors not only illuminate the challenges and complexity of engaging youth and adults in meaningful learning, as well as informed action, on complex environmental issues, but also document and offer important insights into promising ways in which these challenges might be addressed. In addition to the many stimulating ideas and strategies for building the learning capacities of individuals and organizations for creating ecologically sustainable communities and societies, further important questions are raised that educators, policymakers and researchers might consider.
    Note: Preliminary Material / , Introduction to Issues in Learning, Culture and Agency in Environmental Education / , Exploring Student Learning and Challenges in Formal Environmental Education / , Rainbow Warriors: The Unfolding of Agency in Early Adolescents' Environmental Involvement / , Social Learning in Action: A Reconstruction of an Urban Community Moving Towards Sustainability / , Synergy of the Commons: Co-Facilitated Learning and Collective Action / , 'If the Public Knew Better, they Would Act Better': The Pervasive Power of the Myth of the Ignorant Public / , Learning and Participation in Developmental Projects Directed Towards Sustainable Development in Conference Centres / , The Role and Influence of News Media on Public Understanding of Environmental Issues / , Popular Media, Intersubjective Learning and Cultural Production / , Understanding Others, Understanding Ourselves: Engaging in Constructive Dialogue About Process in Doctoral Study in (Environmental) Education / , New Possibilities for Mediation in Society: How is Environmental Education Research Responding? / , Environmental Learning and Agency in Diverse Educational and Cultural Contexts / , Biographies / , Index /
    Additional Edition: Print version: Engaging Environmental Education: Learning, Culture and Agency Leiden ; Boston : Brill | Sense, [2010], ISBN 9789460911606
    Language: English
    URL: DOI:
    URL: DOI
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9948664639002882
    Format: 1 online resource (200 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453917152
    Series Statement: [Re]thinking Environmental Education 6
    Content: Critical Education and Sociomaterial Practice presents a situated approach to learning that suggests the need for more explicit attention to sociomaterial practice in critical education. Specifically, it explores social, place and narrative dimensions of practical experience as they unfold in schools, in place-based learning, and teacher education contexts. Such an orientation to practice both links social and material conditions (social relations, other species, physical context, objects) to human consciousness and learning, and considers the relationship between such learning and broader cultural change. The core of the book is an examination of critical situated learning undertaken through three separate empirical studies, each of which we use to elaborate a particular domain or dimension of practical experience. In turning to the sociomaterial contexts of learning, the book also underscores how social and environmental issues are necessarily linked, such as in the production of food deserts in cities or in the pollution of the drinking water in Indigenous communities through oil development. More social movements globally are connecting the dots between sexism, heteronormativity, racism, colonization, White privilege, globalization, poverty, and climate justice, including with issues of land, territory and sovereignty, water, food, energy, and treatment and extinction of other species. As a result, categorizing some concerns as ‘social justice’ or ‘critical’ issues and others as ‘environmental,’ becomes increasingly untenable. The book thus suggests that more integrative and productive forms of critical education are needed to respond to these complex and pressing socio-ecological conditions.
    Content: «In their ground breaking book, McKenzie and Bieler breathe new life into the practice of critical education. Their cogent analyses of criticality through the frameworks of social and ecological education revive the intersection as a meaningful and generative space. They carry this approach through their careful, ethnographic work across diverse school settings in a way that brings new meaning and shape to how we understand critical education as an engaged, embodied, and emplaced practice. This book is a must read for all educators seeking to support students as the critical interlocutors of their own lives. Their work provides hope for everyone searching for more meaningful approaches to relational solidarity and collective action.» (Sandy Grande, Centre for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Connecticut College) «McKenzie and Bieler make a crucial step toward addressing the urgent need to invent alter-narratives for what educators take to be «critical education.» In response to mounting evidence that many of our material practices for living as humans on this planet are not viable – including many practices of education – McKenzie and Bieler steer us away from oversimplified accounts of «agency» and «critical practice» that have dominated discourses of critical education. They turn us toward concepts and stories that can assist us in attuning our pedagogical imaginations and projects to emerging material conditions of the Anthropocene.» (Elizabeth Ellsworth, Professor of Media Studies, The New School University) «The textures, patterns, sounds and meanings of sociomaterial learning are brought together with critical pedagogy in this ground breaking book. Through examining the living relational curriculum of the summer institutes, temporality, embodiment and power are mobilised as core concepts of a critical education for the millennial generation. The unique scholarship of the authors has brought «an oeuvre, a book, a sentence, an idea to life,» offering new possibilities for rethinking pedagogy beyond the binaries of human and non-human in issues of justice.» (Margaret Somerville, Centre for Educational Research, University of Western Sydney)
    Note: Contents: Introducing Critique as Sociomaterial Practice – Theorizing Practical Experience and Critical Situated Learning: The Social, Place, and Narration as Dimensions of Practice – Social Norms and Social Change: Class and Belonging in Critical Education Programs – Learning in Place: Wayfinding, Emplacement, and Creativity – Narration as Assemblage: Storytelling and Performance with Digital Media – Practice Makes Practice in Education: Pedagogy, Policy, and Research.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433115042
    Language: English
    Subjects: Education
    RVK:
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  • 5
    UID:
    almafu_BV047463557
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 237 Seiten) : , Illustrationen.
    ISBN: 978-3-030-74266-9
    Series Statement: Contributions from science education research volume 8
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74265-2
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74267-6
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-030-74268-3
    Language: English
    Keywords: Naturwissenschaftlicher Unterricht ; Außerschulische Bildung
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_9947363498802882
    Format: XIII, 412 p. 30 illus., 20 illus. in color. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9789400777934
    Content: Drawing on data generated by the EU’s Interests and Recruitment in Science (IRIS) project, this volume examines the issue of young people’s participation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. With an especial focus on female participation, the chapters offer analysis deploying varied theoretical frameworks, including sociology, social psychology, and gender studies. The material also includes reviews of relevant research in science education, and summaries of empirical data concerning student choices in STEM disciplines in five European countries. Featuring both quantitative and qualitative analyses, the book makes a substantial contribution to the developing theoretical agenda in STEM education. It augments available empirical data and identifies strategies in policy-making that could lead to improved participation—and gender balance—in STEM disciplines. The majority of the chapter authors are IRIS project members, with additional chapters written by specially invited contributors. The book provides researchers and policy makers alike with a comprehensive and authoritative exploration of the core issues in STEM educational participation.
    Note: Introduction: Participation in science and technology education - presenting the challenge and introducing project IRIS -- Section 1:Theoretical perspectives on educational choice -- Chapter 1: Expectancy-value perspectives on STEM choice in late-modern societies -- Chapter 2. A narrative approach to understand students’ identities and choices -- Chapter 3: Gender, STEM studies and educational choices. Insights from feminist perspectives -- Section 2: Interest and participation in STEM from primary school to phD -- Chapter 4: STEM attitudes, interests and career choice -- Chapter 5: Science aspirations and gender identity: Lessons from the ASPIRES project -- Chapter 6: The impact of science curriculum content on students’ subject choices in post-compulsory schooling -- Chapter 7: A place for STEM: Probing the reasons for undergraduate course choices -- Chapter 8: Short stories of educational choice – in the words of science and technology students -- Chapter 9: Understanding declining science participation in Australia: A systemic perspective -- Chapter 10: Choice patterns of PhD students: why should i pursue a PhD? -- Chapter 11: The impact of outreach and out-of-school activities on Norwegian upper secondary students’ STEM motivations -- Section 3: Staying in STEM, leaving STEM? -- Chapter 12: Why do students in stem higher education programmes drop/opt out? Explanations offered from research -- Chapter 13: What makes them leave and where do they go? Non-completion and institutional departures in STEM -- Chapter 14: The first-year experience: Students’ encounter with science and engineering programmes -- Chapter 15: Keeping pace. Educational choice motivations and first-year experiences in the words of Italian students -- Section 4: Applying feminist perspectives to understand STEM participation -- Chapter 16: When research challenges gender stereotypes: Exploring narratives of girls’ educational choices -- Chapter 17: Italian female and male students’ choices: STEM studies and motivations -- Chapter 18: Being a woman in a man’s place or being a man in a women’s place: insights into students’ experiences of science and engineering at university -- Chapter 19: Italian students’ ideas about gender and science in late modern societies. interpretations from a feminist perspective -- Section 5: Understanding and improving STEM participation: Conclusions and recommendations -- Chapter 20: Understanding student participation and choice in science and technology education: The contribution of IRIS -- Chapter 21: Improving participation in science and technology higher education: Ways forward -- Appendix: The IRIS questionnaire: Brief account of instrument development, data collection and respondents.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9789400777927
    Language: English
    Subjects: Natural Sciences
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 7
    UID:
    almahu_9948664909602882
    Format: 1 online resource (318 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453908549
    Series Statement: [Re]thinking Environmental Education 1
    Content: Environmental educators often adhere to a relatively narrow theoretical paradigm focusing on changing attitudes and knowledge, which are assumed to foster pro-environmental behaviors, which, in turn, leads to better environmental quality. This book takes a different approach to trying to understand how environmental education might influence people, their communities, and the environment. The authors view changing environmental behaviors as a «wicked» problem, that is, a problem that does not readily lend itself to solutions using existing disciplinary approaches. The book as a whole opens up new avenues for pursuing environmental education research and practice and thus expands the conversation around environmental education, behaviors, and quality. Through developing transdisciplinary research questions and conceptual paradigms, this book also suggests new practices beyond those currently used in environmental education, natural resources management, and other environmental fields.
    Note: Contents: Marianne E. Krasny: Introduction. Tales of a Transdisciplinary Scholar – Joseph E. Heimlich/Mary Miss: Art and Environmental Education Research: Reflections on Participation – Jeppe Læssøe/Marianne E. Krasny: Participation in Environmental Education: Crossing Boundaries under the Big Tent – Martha C. Monroe/Shorna Broussard Allred: Building Capacity for Community-Based Natural Resource Management with Environmental Education – Scott Peters/Arjen E. J. Wals: Learning and Knowing in Pursuit of Sustainability: Concepts and Tools for Transdisciplinary Environmental Research – Barbara A. Crawford/Rebecca Jordan: Inquiry, Models, and Complex Reasoning to Transform Learning in Environmental Education – Joseph E. Heimlich/Mary Miss: Art and Environmental Education Research: Reflections on Appreciation – John Fraser/Carol B. Brandt: The Emotional Life of the Environmental Educator – Leesa Fawcett/Janis L. Dickinson: Psychological Resilience, Uncertainty, and Biological Conservation: Junctures Between Emotional Knowledges, Nature Experiences, and Environmental Education – Joseph E. Heimlich/Mary Miss: Art and Environmental Education Research: Reflections on Place – Timon McPhearson/Keith G. Tidball: Disturbances in Urban Social-Ecological Systems: Niche Opportunities for Environmental Education – Richard C. Stedman/Nicole M. Ardoin: Mobility, Power, and Scale in Place-Based Environmental Education – Marianne E. Krasny/Megan K. Halpern/Bruce V. Lewenstein/Justin Dillon: Conclusion. Do «Arranged Marriages» Generate Novel Insights?
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433111792
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433111808
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 8
    UID:
    kobvindex_GFZ731281225
    Format: XIII, 576 Seiten , Illustrationen, graphische Darstellungen
    ISBN: 0415892392 (pbk) , 9780415892391 (pbk) , 0415892384 (hbk) , 9780415892384 (hbk) , 0203813332=9780203813331 (electronic; ebk)
    Content: "The environment and contested notions of sustainability are increasingly topics of public interest, political debate, and legislation across the world. Environmental education journals now publish research from a wide variety of methodological traditions that show linkages between the environment, health, development, and education. This growth in scholarship makes this an opportune time to review and consolidate the knowledge base of the environmental education (EE) field. The purpose of this 51-chapter handbook is not only to illuminate the most important concepts, findings and theories that have been developed by EE research, but also to critically examine the historical progression of the field, its current debates and controversies, what is still missing from the EE research agenda, and where that agenda might be headed. Published for the American Educational Research Association (AERA)"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Language: English
    Subjects: Education , Geography , General works
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 9
    UID:
    almahu_9949702251402882
    Format: 1 online resource
    ISBN: 9789087901677
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Content: Issues relating to values have always had a place in the school science curriculum. Sometimes this has been only in terms of the inclusion of topics such as 'the nature of science' and/or 'scientific method' and/or particular intentions for laboratory work that relate to 'scientific method.'sometimes it has been much broader, for example in curricula with STS emphases. Of importance to aspects of this proposal is that different countries/cultures have had different traditions in terms of the place of values in the school [science] curriculum. One obvious very broad difference of this form is the central place in [science] education thinking in many European countries of bildung, and the complete absence of this construct from most [science] curriculum thinking in English speaking contexts. There are numbers of such country/cultural differences. In the 1990s many countries moved towards various conceptualizations of Outcomes Based Education - OBE (sometimes so labelled and sometimes not). It was usual (but not universal) for OBE focused science curricula to have constrained views of the values that should be implicit and explicit in curriculum; that is views concerned only with 'the nature of science' and 'scientific method' (both usually seen as quite unproblematic). Currently there are a number of education systems that are changing again, and choosing to move away from Outcomes Based Education (for example, South Africa and several Australian states). One of the most interesting features of many of these movements is the re-embracing of a wider view of the science curriculum, including a reconsideration of the nature and place of the values associated with science in the purposes for and approaches to science education.
    Note: Preliminary Material /
    Additional Edition: Print version: The Re-Emergence of Values in Science Education, Leiden Boston : Brill | Sense, 2007
    Language: English
    URL: DOI:
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1738134776
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource)
    ISBN: 9789087901677
    Series Statement: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
    Content: Preliminary Material /Deborah Corrigan , Justin Dillon and Richard Gunstone -- Why consider values and the science curriculum? /Richard Gunstone , Deborah Corrigan and Justin Dillon -- Values and science education - values in the intended curriculum /Richard Gunstone -- What should be the aim(s) of school science education? /Michael Reiss -- Democracy, scientific literacy and values in science education in the United States /Jane L. Lehr -- Diversity, values and the science curriculum /Gaell M. Hildebrand -- The value of science in African countries /Cliff Malcolm -- Science, the environment and citizenship /Justin Dillon and Alan Reid -- The valuing of technology in the science curriculum /Alister Jones -- Fostering interactions between the values of science and spirituality /Beverley Jane -- Values and science teaching - values in the implemented curriculum /Deborah Corrigan -- Values in the science classroom - the 'enacted' curriculum /Mary Ratcliffe -- Values in school science and mathematics education /Deborah Corrigan and Richard Gunstone -- Values associated with representing science teachers' pedagogical content knowledge /Amanda Berry , John Loughran and Pamela Mulhall -- Developing an ethically attentive practice /Larson Rogers , Gaalen Erickson and Jim Gaskell -- The contribution of information technology for inclusion of socio-scientific issues in science /Doris Jorde and Sonja Mork -- Values of science portrayed in out-of-school Contexts /Léonie Rennie -- Values and science learners /Justin Dillon -- Values in the measurement of students' science achievement in TIMSS and PISA /Peter Fensham -- Science education and youth's identity construction - two incompatible projects? /Camilla Schreiner and Svein Sjøberg -- Gender inclusive science education? /Helene Sørensen -- About the Authors /Deborah Corrigan , Justin Dillon and Richard Gunstone -- Index /Deborah Corrigan , Justin Dillon and Richard Gunstone -- Other titles of interest /Deborah Corrigan , Justin Dillon and Richard Gunstone.
    Content: Issues relating to values have always had a place in the school science curriculum. Sometimes this has been only in terms of the inclusion of topics such as ‘the nature of science’ and/or ‘scientific method’ and/or particular intentions for laboratory work that relate to ‘scientific method.’sometimes it has been much broader, for example in curricula with STS emphases. Of importance to aspects of this proposal is that different countries/cultures have had different traditions in terms of the place of values in the school [science] curriculum. One obvious very broad difference of this form is the central place in [science] education thinking in many European countries of bildung, and the complete absence of this construct from most [science] curriculum thinking in English speaking contexts. There are numbers of such country/cultural differences. In the 1990s many countries moved towards various conceptualizations of Outcomes Based Education - OBE (sometimes so labelled and sometimes not). It was usual (but not universal) for OBE focused science curricula to have constrained views of the values that should be implicit and explicit in curriculum; that is views concerned only with ‘the nature of science’ and ‘scientific method’ (both usually seen as quite unproblematic). Currently there are a number of education systems that are changing again, and choosing to move away from Outcomes Based Education (for example, South Africa and several Australian states). One of the most interesting features of many of these movements is the re-embracing of a wider view of the science curriculum, including a reconsideration of the nature and place of the values associated with science in the purposes for and approaches to science education
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789087900366
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe The Re-Emergence of Values in Science Education Leiden Boston : Brill | Sense, 2007
    Language: English
    URL: DOI
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