An Evaluation of Saltwatch: A School and Community Action Research Environmental Education Project

1997 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 61-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharron L. Pfueller ◽  
Ian Innes-Wardell ◽  
Helen Skondras ◽  
Dianne Marshall ◽  
Tarnya Kruger ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Saltwatch environmental education program aims to increase awareness and understanding of salinity and thereby to stimulate remedial and preventative action. An evaluation of the program in Victoria in 1995 revealed its wide use across school curricula, and subsequent practical environmental action in 53% of schools. Participation in Saltwatch and subsequent environmental activities were more restricted in community groups. The paper concludes with a discussion of Saltwatch's success and possible improvements.

2005 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 23-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy Ballantyne ◽  
Jan Packer ◽  
Michele Everett

AbstractDespite the increasing importance of, and interest in, documenting the impact of environmental education programs on students' learning for sustainability, few tools are currently available to measure young students' environmental learning across all the dimensions of knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviours. This paper reports on the development of such a tool, using an iterative action research process with 134 students, aged six to eleven, attending programs at an Environmental Education Centre in Queensland, Australia. The resulting instrument, the Environmental Learning Outcomes Survey (ELOS) incorporates observations of students' engagement in learning processes as well as measuring learning outcomes, and allows both of these aspects to be linked to particular components of the environmental education program. Test data using the instrument are reported to illustrate its potential usefulness. It is envisaged that the refined instrument (appended) will enable researchers to measure student environmental learning in the field, investigate environmental education program impacts and identify aspects of programs that are most effective in facilitating student learning.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amalia Filippaki ◽  
Vasiliki Tsianika ◽  
Charikleia Chroniari ◽  
Dimitrios Karaoglanidis

<p>This paper presents an Urban Environmental Education program through Place-Based Education approach which was implemented at the school of European Education of Heraklion during the 2015-16 school year, as part of an Action Research. The aim of this research was to investigate the improvement in the relationship between the urban primary school where the teachers worked and the local community. The school has 2 language sections, Greek and English, and the pupils come from various European countries. The participants were four (4) teachers, twenty-six (26) pupils from both sections and two (2) professors from the University of Crete as support persons, our "critical friends". The teachers realized that all Environmental projects at the school were concerned with global environmental issues but that there was no connection with the environment surrounding the school. What is more, there had never been a common project with participants, teachers and pupils, from the two different language sections. For these reasons, the Place - Based Education approach was employed and since the place was the city of Heraklion, the implementation of Urban Environmental Education seemed most appropriate. Almost all the activities were cooperative, experiential, focused on the school and the local environment and the participants systematically reflected on them.</p><p>Στην εργασία αυτή παρουσιάζεται ένα πρόγραμμα Περιβαλλοντικής Εκπαίδευσης βασισμένο στον τόπο, το οποίο υλοποιήθηκε στο πλαίσιο μιας Έρευνας - Δράσης στο Σχολείο Ευρωπαϊκής Παιδείας Ηρακλείου το σχολικό έτος 2015-16. Η Έρευνα-Δράση είχε ως αφετηρία την κοινή διαπίστωση των εκπαιδευτικών που συμμετείχαν ότι σχεδόν όλα τα προγράμματα που είχαν υλοποιηθεί ως τότε στο σχολείο είχαν σχέση με παγκόσμια περιβαλλοντικά προβλήματα, χωρίς αναφορές στον τόπο που ζουν οι μαθητές. Επίσης δεν είχε υλοποιηθεί ποτέ πρόγραμμα με κοινή συμμετοχή των εκπαιδευτικών και των μαθητών των δύο διαφορετικών γλωσσικών τμημάτων του σχολείου, του Ελληνόφωνου  και Αγγλόφωνου. Ένας από τους στόχους της Έρευνας-Δράσης ήταν η ενδυνάμωση των σχέσεων μεταξύ των εκπαιδευτικών καθώς και η επαγγελματική τους ανάπτυξη. Επιλέχτηκε να εφαρμοστεί η σχετικά νέα παιδαγωγική προσέγγιση Place-Based Education (P.B.E.) και συγκεκριμένα υιοθετήθηκε μια διακριτή επιστημονική προσέγγιση: η Urban Environmental Education. Στο πρόγραμμα συμμετείχαν 4 εκπαιδευτικοί, 26 μαθητές από την Ε΄ τάξη του Ελληνόφωνου και  την  Δ΄ / Ε ΄ τάξη του Αγγλόφωνου Τμήματος, καθώς και δύο καθηγήτριες από το Π.Τ.Δ.Ε. και το τμήμα Φ.Κ.Σ. του Πανεπιστημίου Κρήτης  ως  κριτικοί φίλοι. Οι δράσεις που υλοποιήθηκαν ήταν βιωματικές και ομαδοσυνεργατικές, εστιασμένες στο σχολικό και στο ευρύτερο τοπικό περιβάλλον.  Οι εκπαιδευτικοί, μέσα από μια διαδικασία κριτικού αναστοχασμού, δημιούργησαν  πιο ουσιαστικές σχέσεις επικοινωνίας, συνεργασίας κι εμπιστοσύνης μεταξύ τους  αλλά και με τοπικούς φορείς, επανεξέτασαν τις πρακτικές τους, τις εμπλούτισαν, άλλαξαν την επαγγελματική τους αυτοεικόνα και βελτίωσαν την εκπαιδευτική τους πραγματικότητα.</p><p> </p><p><strong> Article visualizations:</strong></p><p><img src="/-counters-/edu_01/0693/a.php" alt="Hit counter" /></p>


1996 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 3-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pat Darlington ◽  
Rosemary Black

ABSTRACTAn exciting and successful environmental education program has been implemented at Kosciusko National Park in south-eastern NSW. It is based on programs developed by the Institute of Earth Education, a non-profit volunteer organisation made up of an international network of individuals and member organisations. The major work of the Institute is to design and develop educational programs.The two most popular programs offered at Kosciusko National Park are EarthkeepersTM and Earth CaretakersTM which are focused, sequential and cumulative nature education programs intended for upper primary children, that is, ten to twelve year olds. The aim of these programs is to help students enjoy, understand and live in harmony with the Earth. The activities integrate three components-understanding, feelings and processing—mirroring the interpretation philosophy of understanding, appreciation and protection. Evaluation has shown that the programs successfully enhance school curricula subjects and motivate students to change the way they and their families live.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger N. Reeb ◽  
Susan F. Folger ◽  
Anne L. Steel ◽  
Sara E. Mason ◽  
Laura E. Stayton ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Reynaldo Morales Cardenas

This paper examines the functioning of and underlying assumptions about digital media in collaborative curriculum design processes in public science and environmental education, and community-designed action research learning programs. The article discusses teaching practices in US rural Northeast Wisconsin among Native Youth learning processes, from the complementation and articulation of formal and informal education to meaningful engagement and participation in science. The focus on the transformative use of digital media in science community education is intended to serve two interrelated purposes: First, it helps to address cultural-historical relations around the production of knowledge and relevant curriculums and pedagogies for rural tribal youth. Second, it intersects with the opportunities for the transferability of activity systems and action research centered around the production of mediational artifacts designed for the collective negotiation between First Nations Tribal communities and western modeled schools, institutions, workplaces, and societal roles. The transferability of this model envisions the incorporation of local actors and institutions in a deep artifact-based dialogue around epistemologies of self-determination and sustainability for Peoples who are fighting for their survival. These propositions take a new level when the transformative power of digital media shifts representations of power in historically marginalized communities, serving a larger activity of reorganizing ecologies of learning in education for culturally distinctive communities of practice.


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