scholarly journals Environmental learning in everyday life: foundations of meaning and a context for change

Author(s):  
Nicole M. Ardoin ◽  
Joe E. Heimlich
2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 314-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachelle K. Gould ◽  
Nicole M. Ardoin ◽  
Jennifer M. Thomsen ◽  
Noelle Wyman Roth

Author(s):  
Sylvia Christine Almeida ◽  
Marilyn Fleer

AbstractInternationally there is growing interest in how young children engage with and learn concepts of science and sustainability in their everyday lives. These concepts are often built through nature and outdoor play in young children. Through the dialectical concept of everyday and scientific concept formation (Vygotsky LS, The collected works of L.S. Vygotsky. Problems of general psychology, V.1, (Trans. N Minick). Editor of English Translation, RW Rieber, and AS Carton, New York: Kluwer Academic and Plenum Publishers, 1987), this chapter presents a study of how families transformatively draw attention to STEM and sustainability concepts in the everyday practices of the home. The research followed a focus child (4–5 year old) from four families as they navigated everyday life and talked about the environments in which they live. Australia as a culturally diverse community was reflected in the families, whose heritage originated in Europe, Iran, India, Nepal and Taiwan. The study identified the multiple ways in which families introduce practices and conceptualise imagined futures and revisioning (Payne PG, J HAIA 12:2–12, 2005a). About looking after their environment. It was found that young children appear to develop concepts of STEM, but also build agency in exploration, with many of these explorations taking place in outdoor settings. We conceptualise this as a motive orientation to caring for the environment, named as E-STEM. The study emphasises for education to begin with identifying family practices and children’s explorations, as a key informant for building relevant and locally driven pedagogical practices to support environmental learning.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 648
Author(s):  
Bunga Dwi Immaniar ◽  
Sumarmi Sumarmi ◽  
I Komang Astina

<p><strong>Abstract:</strong> Environmental damage that occurs on earth is caused by human activities. Human activities that use the environment excessively cause the environment to be damaged. These activities describe human attitudes and behavior that are low in environmental preservation. Low human behavior towards the environment can be improved through education through environmental learning. Environmental learning takes the form of real learning activities to gain knowledge through everyday life. Environmental learning in everyday life is obtained through local wisdom to improve environmental care behavior. The purpose of this study was to determine the participation of students using local wisdom-based environmental learning through the Experiential Learning model. The study design included the participation of students using local wisdom-based environmental learning through the Experiential Learning model.</p><strong>Abstrak:<em> </em></strong>Kerusakan lingkungan yang terjadi di bumi disebabkan oleh aktivitas manusia. Aktivitas manusia yang memanfaatkan lingkungan secara berlebihan menyebabkan lingkungan menjadi rusak. Aktivitas tersebut menggambarkan sikap dan perilaku manusia yang rendah dalam pelestarian lingkungan. Perilaku manusia yang rendah terhadap lingkungan dapat diperbaiki melalui pendidikan melalui pembelajaran lingkungan. Pembelajaran lingkungan berupa kegiatan belajar secara nyata untuk memperoleh pengetahuan melalui kehidupan sehari-hari. Pembelajaran lingkungan dalam kehidupan sehari-hari didapatkan melalui kearifan lokal untuk meningkatkan perilaku peduli lingkungan. Tujuan penelitian ini untuk mengetahui partisipasi peserta didik menggunakan pembelajaran lingkungan berbasis kearifan lokal melalui model <em>Experiential Learning</em>. Desain penelitian terdapat partisipasi peserta didik yang menggunakan pembelajaran lingkungan berbasis kearifan lokal melalui model <em>Experiential Learning</em>.


2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ketevan Mamiseishvili

In this paper, I will illustrate the changing nature and complexity of faculty employment in college and university settings. I will use existing higher education research to describe changes in faculty demographics, the escalating demands placed on faculty in the work setting, and challenges that confront professors seeking tenure or administrative advancement. Boyer’s (1990) framework for bringing traditionally marginalized and neglected functions of teaching, service, and community engagement into scholarship is examined as a model for balancing not only teaching, research, and service, but also work with everyday life.


2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet B. Ruscher

Two distinct spatial metaphors for the passage of time can produce disparate judgments about grieving. Under the object-moving metaphor, time seems to move past stationary people, like objects floating past people along a riverbank. Under the people-moving metaphor, time is stationary; people move through time as though they journey on a one-way street, past stationary objects. The people-moving metaphor should encourage the forecast of shorter grieving periods relative to the object-moving metaphor. In the present study, participants either received an object-moving or people-moving prime, then read a brief vignette about a mother whose young son died. Participants made affective forecasts about the mother’s grief intensity and duration, and provided open-ended inferences regarding a return to relative normalcy. Findings support predictions, and are discussed with respect to interpersonal communication and everyday life.


2010 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 138-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriele Oettingen ◽  
Doris Mayer ◽  
Babette Brinkmann

Mental contrasting of a desired future with present reality leads to expectancy-dependent goal commitments, whereas focusing on the desired future only makes people commit to goals regardless of their high or low expectations for success. In the present brief intervention we randomly assigned middle-level managers (N = 52) to two conditions. Participants in one condition were taught to use mental contrasting regarding their everyday concerns, while participants in the other condition were taught to indulge. Two weeks later, participants in the mental-contrasting condition reported to have fared better in managing their time and decision making during everyday life than those in the indulging condition. By helping people to set expectancy-dependent goals, teaching the metacognitive strategy of mental contrasting can be a cost- and time-effective tool to help people manage the demands of their everyday life.


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