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Dinorah-Marie Hudson – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2024
This article presents an analysis of environmental science curriculum materials to interrogate and reveal settler moves to innocence (Tuck & Yang, 2012) by analyzing the language used to describe concepts and events that invisiblize Indigenous knowledge and hide settler colonial logics. Using Decolonization is not a metaphor (Tuck & Yang,…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Curriculum, Science Education, Instructional Materials
Marom, Lilach; Rattray, Curtis – Critical Studies in Education, 2022
This paper focuses on the meaning of education for reconciliation in the context of Canadian settler-colonialism. It captures an attempt to delve into the meaning of reconciliation as an experiential process, through learning on the land with the Tahltan People. We focus on reconciliation not as a theory or political discourse, but rather as a…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Foreign Policy, Land Settlement, Experiential Learning
Wahyudi – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2021
This study analyzes factors that triggered the land-ownership struggle for the Titi Tsoro forest area, the Rights for Cultivation Use and to analyze the various differences in interests related to the land's ownership as a major community resource or a production asset for national plantation company named as PTPN XII. This research is qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ownership, Land Use, Conflict
Hepper, Jens – Journal of Teacher Education for Sustainability, 2021
This case study addresses the issue of climate change denial among students in their first year of vocational education. It was possible to shake the belief that man-made climate change was not happening, through letting students measure the potential of natural forest vegetation and compare their findings with those gathered by their peers nine…
Descriptors: Climate, Beliefs, Forestry, Environmental Education
Emmons, Nichlas – i.e.: inquiry in education, 2020
This paper explores the process of developing a continuing education program for tribal land professionals working in tribal land offices across the United States. Born from discussions surrounding the need to professionalize careers in tribal land offices, the National Tribal Land Association developed a certification program for land office…
Descriptors: Program Development, Professional Continuing Education, Reservation American Indians, American Indian Education
Jennifer A. Fowler – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Adults have personal learning experiences outdoors on public lands, and some of the visitors are science teachers. The purpose of this transcendental phenomenological study was to discover how science teachers use the experiences of personal visits to public lands to enhance their science lessons. The study also examined how these teachers used…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Science Teachers
Whalen, Philip; Cagalanan, Dominique – Geography Teacher, 2021
In this article, the authors discuss a hybrid program that included a ten-day interdisciplinary study abroad trip to France, followed by ten days of online learning. Students were recruited from across the university through campus-wide marketing and recruiting events, but the majority of the students who enrolled were those majoring in one or…
Descriptors: Team Teaching, History Instruction, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Karla B. Eitel; Alicia Wheeler; Kay Seven; Josiah Pinkham; Teresa Cavazos Cohn; Christina Uh; Ethan White Temple; Melinda Davis; Joyce McFarland; Jan Eitel; Marcie Carter; Raymond Dixon; Lee Vierling – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
This collaboration between the Nez Perce Tribe and the University of Idaho aimed to address the unique needs and perspectives required for Tribal Natural Resources Management (TNRM). TNRM involves the governance and caretaking of the land and waters, emphasizing the recognition of cultural significance, sovereignty, self-determination, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, High School Students, Indigenous Populations, Scientists
Brittany Vermeulen; Jenny Pizzica; Adrian Renshaw; Jason Reynolds – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2024
Virtual mobility experiences provide a valuable option to enrich student learning and development from home. However, there is a lack of evidence of how these online experiences are leveraged in STEM and their potential positive effect on students' critical thinking capabilities. This study explores and details the design of a short-term virtual…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Science Instruction, Sustainable Development, Objectives
Boerner-Mercier, Jaron; Gray, Ron – Science Teacher, 2020
Land ethics are the ways that humanity justifies their usage of the land. Today this topic is more important than ever as we balance our needs, such as food, water, and energy, with the systems of the natural world. The activity described in this article introduces students to the concept of land ethics using historical case studies of five common…
Descriptors: Ecology, Ethics, Natural Resources, Land Use
Nagle, Corey; Pecore, John – Science Teacher, 2018
Land use and development are complex issues rooted in ecology and environmental science as well as in politics and economics. This complexity lends itself to a problem-based learning (PBL) lesson for environmental science students. In the lesson described in this article, students investigated developing a city-owned, 13-acre site where a shopping…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Science Education, Problem Based Learning, Land Use
Pallant, Amy; Lee, Hee-Sun – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2017
During the past several decades, there has been a growing awareness of the ways humans affect Earth systems. As global problems emerge, educating the next generation of citizens to be able to make informed choices related to future outcomes is increasingly important. The challenge for educators is figuring out how to prepare students to think…
Descriptors: Sustainability, Agriculture, Science Education, Science Curriculum
Wafa Hozien; Henry H. Fowler – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2024
Sacred places hold immense significance in Navajo traditions and communities, playing a vital role in cultural preservation and spiritual practices. These sacred sites are deeply intertwined with the Navajo way of life, serving as focal points for ceremonies, rituals, and connections to the spiritual world. The Navajo people revere various sacred…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Cultural Maintenance, Place Based Education, Tribally Controlled Education
Hadfield-Hill, Sophie; Zara, Cristiana – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2020
In this paper we frame children as geological agents, very much part of epoch and biospherical processes, enfolded in Earth system changes. We draw on the experiences of Indian childhoods in a context where the land, water, animals, children's bodies and forests are being shaped by a politics of corporate city building. We analyse how children and…
Descriptors: Geology, Change, Climate, Indians
Allison Sterling Henward; Hokulani K. Aikau – Review of Research in Education, 2023
Researchers of child learning and development continue to hone understandings of cultural and social impacts on cognition, development, and education. Concurrently, Indigenous educators call for decolonizing schooling at all levels. Land-based education (LBE), as an instructional approach, responds to calls to decolonize education. The authors use…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders, Early Childhood Education, Decolonization