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Peter Reason; Sarah Gillespie – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
What would it be like to learn to live in and experience a world of sentient beings rather than inert objects? How can we learn to awarely participate in a world of communication and interaction, in which trees, crows and rivers may grace us with a response to our attention and our call? How do we learn not just to know this intellectually but…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Animals, Interaction, Responses
Peter Renshaw; Kirsty Jackson; Ron Tooth – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
In this article, we adopt assemblage as "methodology" and as a way to foreground the vitality and relational agency of other species as they encounter humans. Research as assemblage is a process of becoming with others, and we experienced that ontological process during three environmental excursions as we became entangled in…
Descriptors: Animals, Environmental Education, Sensory Experience, Teaching Methods
Scott Jukes; Kathryn Riley – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
In this article, we experiment with a form of dark pedagogy, a pedagogy that confronts haunting pasts-presents-futures in environmental education. We offer a conceptualisation of ghosts that enables us to creatively explore the duration of things and consider the relationality of time. We examine this through two situated contexts, engaging with…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Climate, Time, Biodiversity
Matthew Buttacavoli – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
How well do we know how non-humans experience environmental stressors and how do we communicate that knowledge as educators? This paper addresses these questions by way of an auto-ethnographic account of the author's experience of attempting to listen to the Great Barrier Reef, off the Queensland coast. Through a series of methodological failures…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Educational Anthropology, Teaching Methods
Tammi, Tuure; Rautio, Pauliina – Environmental Education Research, 2023
Because of their mostly upbeat everyday presence in most people's lives globally, Internet memes have gained attention as tools in spreading information and enacting attitudinal change in the face of environmental troubles. The reappropriation of memes for classroom purposes is not straightforward, however. We focus our exploration of Internet…
Descriptors: Internet, Cartoons, Humor, Animals
Laura Fattal; Lynn Needle – Journal of Dance Education, 2024
Climate change is a contemporary global crisis that necessitates pedagogical innovation for the middle school dance classroom. This article describes an integrated design for a dance and science unit. Building on students' kinesthetic abilities, teachers are able to create a unit comprising a series of lessons on bird migrations effected by…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Dance Education, Middle School Students, Elementary School Science
Dunn, Lily – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2020
The wonderful plants and animals of the Daintree Rainforest in Queensland, Australia, are at risk of extinction. They and the rainforests of the world must be protected by taking action on climate change.
Descriptors: Ecology, Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, Animals
Theresa Redmond – English Journal, 2025
To start teaching about climate change in an immediately attention-grabbing and fully somatic way, the author begins with an activity called Singer/Songbird. The goal is for students to quickly identify that media and technology influence our environmental knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors toward climate change. Besides learning that…
Descriptors: Climate, Teaching Methods, Popular Culture, Influence of Technology
Yeomans, William – Primary Science, 2022
The River Clyde in Scotland is famous worldwide for its former commercial life, with trade and shipbuilding concentrated at the tidal end of its 170 km length. Nowadays the river is quieter but cleaner and is recovering from centuries of manmade changes to its bed, banks and flows. The Clyde River Foundation (CRF) is a registered Scottish charity…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Science Education, Foreign Countries, Environmental Education
Caroline Kelley – Childhood Education, 2024
Bringing peace to the world is a profound aspiration, and it can be achieved by instilling the values of empathy, compassion, and respect in young children through humane education. Humane education sows the seeds of hope for a future that can heal our planet and usher in positive societal change. Humane education fosters empathy and ethical…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Altruism, Empathy, Humanistic Education
Tuure Tammi; Riikka Hohti; Maria Saari – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
The inability to respond to the environmental crises has been argued to stem from the crisis of imagination that underlies modernity. In response, the potentials of speculative approaches have been explored. This article presents a speculative worldmaking project conducted in a secondary school with young people. The project involved three…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Time Perspective, Secondary School Students, Intervention
Gisewhite, Rachel A. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
Exposure and experience with ethical dilemmas and controversial socioscientific issues provide a link to students' lives or a pathway for sympathy/empathy and care, where youth use emotion to engage with the scenario and develop critical thinking skills to respond to ethical issues. For this theoretical paper, I focus on how informal science can…
Descriptors: Ethics, Activism, Animals, Marine Education
Bazzul, Jesse – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
This article insists that solidarity with nonhumans is not only a fundamental aspect of symbiotic existence, but a key aspect of resistance to global imperialism. Whilst Indigenous communities have long nurtured and maintained a rich symbiosis and solidarity with nonhumans, modern western thought and social theory must seriously expand its…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ecology, Philosophy, Humanism
Malone, Karen; Tran, Chi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Humans are living in damaged landscapes within a new geographical epoch known as the Anthropocene. The COVID-19 outbreak fuels uncertainty, instability, and ambiguity for humans. This viral disaster has been blamed for losing and further exacerbating ecological imbalance, and prompts a need to re-examine multispecies relations and, in particular,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Diseases, Climate
Puig, J.; Echarri, F. – Environmental Education Research, 2018
A primary aim of environmental education is to promote environmental values. Significant life experiences (SLE) are a powerful, fast and long-lasting way to achieve this objective, but they have received little scholarly attention thus far. As examples to help us characterize SLE and understand their function, the cases of three well-known…
Descriptors: Experience, Environment, Environmental Education, Values