Cultural Studies and Environmentalism
The Confluence of EcoJustice, Place-based (Science) Education, and Indigenous Kn
P Mueller, Michael / van Eijck et al, Michiel
Erschienen am
01.05.2010
Beschreibung
InhaltsangabeForward David T. Sobel and Paige P. Jackins Prologue Michael P. Mueller and Deborah J. Tippins Poetry Arthur J. Stewart Table of Contents ----------- Chapter 1: The Need for Confluence: Why a "River" Runs Through It Deborah J. Tippins and Michael P. Mueller Section 1: EcoJustice Section Introduction: Nurturing Morally Defensible Environmentalism Michael P. Mueller and Deborah J. Tippins Chapter 2: EcoJustice Education for Science Educators Rebecca A. Martusewicz, John Lupinacci, and Gary Schakenberg Chapter 2a: Toward Awakening Consciousness: A Response to EcoJustice Education and Science Education Michael L. Bentley Chapter 2b: Invoking the Sacred: Reflections on the Implications of EcoJustice for Science Education Maria S. Rivera Maulucci Chapter 3: Local Matters, EcoJustice, and Community Opportunities of Village Life for Teaching Science Wolff-Michael Roth Chapter 3a: Engaging the Environment: Relationships of Demography, EcoJustice, and Science Teacher Education in Response to Wolff-Michael Roth Kurt Love, Teddie Phillipson Mower, and Peter Veronesi Chapter 4: Moral-Ethical Character and Science Education: EcoJustice Ethics through Socioscientific Issues (SSI) Michael P. Mueller and Dana L. Zeidler Chapter 4a: What's Wrong with Genetic Engineering? Ethics, Socioscientific Issues, and Education Bradley D. Rowe Chapter 4b: Action-Based Science Instruction: Service Learning, Stewardship, and Civic Involvement Jennifer Ponder and Amy Cox-Peterson Chapter 5: Developing a Sustainable Agricultural Curriculum in Malawi: Reconciling a Colonial Legacy with Indigenous Knowledge and Practices George E. Glasson Chapter 5a: When Elephants Fight, It is the Grass that Suffers Norman Thomson Chapter 5b: Working for Change: Reflections on the Issue of Sustainability and Social Change Ajay Sharma Section Summary: Questions for Copenhagen: EcoJustice Perspectives and Summary Deborah J. Tippins and Michael P. Mueller Section 2: PlaceBased(Science) Education Section Introduction: Place-Based (Science) Education: Something is Happening Here Michiel van Eijck Chapter 6: Educating-Within-Place: Care, Citizen Science, and EcoJustice Doug Karrow and Xavier Fazio Chapter 6a: Invoking the Ontological Realm of Place: A Dialogic Response Jennifer Adams, Sheliza Ibrahim, and Miyoun Lim Chapter 7: A Case Study of David, a Native Hawaiian Science Teacher: Cultural Historical Activity Theory and Implications for Teacher Education Pauline W.U. Chinn and David D. Maika'i Hana'ike Chapter 7a: Deconstructing Chinn and Hana'ike: Pedagogy through an Indigenous Lens Suzanne L. Stewart Chapter 7b: Critical Pedagogy of Place: A Framework for Understanding Relationships between People in (Contested) Shared Places Sonya N. Martin Chapter 8: River Advocacy: Valuing Complex Systems as the Groundwork for River Relationships Tina Williams Pagan Chapter 8a: Bringing the Invisible to Light: Art as Places for Advocacy Jamie Calkin Chapter 8b: River Advocacy as a Case of/for Novelizing Discourse in Science Education Michiel van Eijck Chapter 9: Implications of Sense of Place and Place-Based Education for Ecological Integrity and Cultural Sustainability in Diverse Places Steve Semken and Elizabeth Brandt Chapter 9a: Responding to Place David B. Zandvliet Chapter 9b: Envisioning Polysemicity: Generating Insights into the Complexity of Place-Based Research within Contested Spaces Christina A. Siry Section Summary: Place-Based Education as a Call from/to Action Michiel van Eijck Section 3: Indigenous Knowledge Systems Section Introduction: One Hundred Ways to Use a Coconut Jennifer D. Adams Chapter 10: Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), Border Theory and Justice Lyn Carter and Nicolas Walker Chapter 10a: Considering the Consequences of Hybridity: Protecting Traditional Ecological Knowledge from Predation Deborah J. Tippins, June George, a