NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Angela Molloy Murphy – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
The case has been made -- many of the approaches humans employ to address environmental collapse are founded on the very (White, Western, colonial, positivist, capitalist, human supremacist) thinking that advanced planetary degradation in the first place. We know how this story ends. If we continue perpetuating narratives of management, mastery…
Descriptors: Ecology, Environmental Education, Humanism, Crisis Management
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kay Sidebottom; Lou Mycroft – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Our current ecological predicament requires a shift to a post-anthropocentric educational paradigm in which we educate for and about a world that is not "for us," but comprised of a multitude of eco-systems of which we are simply a part. To facilitate this, education should be enacted differently; we need to experience learning not as…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Ecology, Environmental Education, Humanism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Everth, Thomas; Gurney, Laura; Eames, Chris – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
In this paper, we employ Deleuzian philosophy to explore the complex challenges confronting teachers and education systems posed by the climate emergency and the implications of the resulting posthumanist turn. Self-identified climate-activist teachers working in schools in Aotearoa New Zealand were asked to draw Deleuzian assemblages of their…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Philosophy, Climate, Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tytler, Cassandra – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2022
This paper explores the potential for a mode of postqualitative inquiry as generative knowledge-affect by looking towards the practice-led in-progress intermedial project, "We Found A Body." The project functions as a form of urban play in a way that decentres and reconstructs participants so that their bodies, their technology and the…
Descriptors: Drama, Human Body, Technology, Environment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Davies, Bronwyn – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
In the last 30 years we have increasingly, as humans, been individualised and set in competition with each other in the quest for ever increasing productivity. Neoliberalism has exacerbated those very liberal humanist features that feminist poststructuralist theory set out to dismantle with its critique of binary thought and the ascendance of…
Descriptors: Individualism, Competition, Productivity, Neoliberalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Widdop Quinton, Helen; Ward, Kumara; Ahearn, Marilyn; Carapeto, Teresa – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2020
Drawing on posthumanist and new materialism theorising, we take the concept of resonance for an a/r/tographic 'walk' to know, be and do differently, to challenge human-centric separatist ways that have resulted in our current socioecological crises. Beginning with Ingold's knotty thinking, we identify the notion of resonance as a node for…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ecology, Humanism, Epistemology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Jukes, Scott; Stewart, Alistair; Morse, Marcus – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
Situated within a series of river journeys, this inquiry considers the role of material landscape in shaping learning possibilities and explores practices of reading landscapes diffractively. We consider ways we might pay attention to the ever-changing flux of places while experimenting with posthuman pedagogical praxis. Methodologically, we…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Environmental Education, Humanism, Qualitative Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Malone, Karen; Logan, Marianne; Siegel, Lisa; Regalado, Julie; Wade-Leeuwen, Bronwen – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2020
Drawing on a posthuman lens we walk -- with Deborah Bird Rose and her conceptual framing of "shimmer." We explore shimmering as incorporating a sensorial richness, as beauty and grandeur, as constantly in flux, moving between past, future and back again. Shimmering has potentiality in a posthuman context in its encompassing of spiritual…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Feminism, Philosophy, Land Settlement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Gough, Annette; Gough, Noel – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2022
In this essay, we argue that postqualitative inquiry is not a useful descriptor for environmental education research and that it is time to consider what comes after the posts. We argue that thinking with theory as a process methodology in the onto-epistemological framings of our research is more generative and opens up opportunities for this…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Environmental Education, Educational Research, Qualitative Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cole, David R. – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2019
The philosophy of Gilles Deleuze has become popular in recent moves to embed approaches such as the new materialist and the posthuman in environmental education. Certainly, a newfound respect for the material universe, including the comprehension of the human place in it, and the tendency to a posthuman theoretical position, are both important…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Philosophy, Humanism, Educational Practices
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cutter-Mackenzie-Knowles, Amy; Brown, Shae L.; Osborn, Maia; Blom, Simone M.; Brown, Adi; Wijesinghe, Thilinika – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2020
We acknowledge and pay respect to the people of the Yugambeh Nation on whose Land we work, meet and study. We recognise the significant role the past and future Elders play in the life of the University and the region. We are mindful that within and without the buildings, the Land always was and always will be Aboriginal Land. This paper…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Educational Research, Indigenous Knowledge, Philosophy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kopnina, Helen – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
This article discusses closed-loop systems, namely Cradle to Cradle and circular economy, in the context of sustainable education. These circular models, at least ideally, promise absolute decoupling of resource consumption from the economy. This article presents student assignments applying these models to Hennes & Mauritz, a clothing retail…
Descriptors: Humanism, Ethics, Qualitative Research, Inquiry
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Rafe, Mehri Mirzaei; Noaparast, Khosrow Bagheri; Hosseini, Afzal Sadat; Sajadieh, Narges – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2019
This article will investigate the philosophy of science of Roy Bhaskar (1944-2014) as a coherent basis for environmental education. The work of Bhaskar serves as an in-depth approach to understanding how to apply critical realism (the critical and the realist) to matters such as environmental education, because he concretely theorises the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Educational Philosophy, Critical Theory, Realism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Malone, Karen – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2016
This article explores and reconsiders the view of children's encounters with place as central to a place-based pedagogy that seeks to dismantle rather than support constructions of a nature-culture binary. I unpack the current fervour for reinserting the child in nature and nature-based education as a significant phenomenon in environmental and…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Place Based Education, Outdoor Education, Children
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Rousell, David – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2016
Over the last three decades, scientists have uncovered the extent of human impacts on the earth's operating systems with increasing clarity and precision. These findings have prompted scientific claims that we have transitioned out of the Holocene and into the Anthropocene epoch in the earth's geological history (Crutzen & Stoermer, 2000). At…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Geology, Climate, Humanism
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2