Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:07:56.820Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Environmental Education is History: The Extent to Which Modern History Education Adopts Characteristics of Socially Critical Environmental Education1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 June 2015

Clayton Barry*
Affiliation:
Yeppoon State High School
*
Yeppoon State High School, PO Box 296, Yeppoon, QLD 4703, Australia. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This paper reports on a research study that investigated the extent to which the Queensland secondary school subject Modern History adopts characteristics of socially critical environmental education. The study found that while the Modern History syllabus gives ample opportunities for students to focus their inquiries on environment, Modern History teachers had overlooked this aspect of the syllabus. More positive findings of this research are that both the syllabus and teachers adopt many characteristics of socially critical environmental education. In particular, the values, political and emancipatory characteristics feature strongly in both policy and practice. To a lesser extent, both the holistic and issues-based characteristics are represented. Finally, this research study shows that the action characteristic, as defined in socially critical environmental education, is clearly neglected. Despite this, there is a case to be made for Modern History to be used as a vehicle for socially critical environmental education in Queensland schools.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006 

Footnotes

1.

This research study employs the term socially critical environmental education rather than the terms education for the environment or education for sustainability. There has been exhaustive debate about the use of the terms above (see, for instance, Jickling, 1992; Van Rossen, 1995; Jickling & Spork, 1998). In brief, I share the concern that educating for anything has a potentially deterministic, even inculcating tone that jeopardises its educational potential in the school system (Holsman, 2001, p. 4; Jickling & Spork, 1998, p. 314; Sauvé, 1999, p. 23). For the purposes of this research there are no characteristic differences between education for the environment and socially critical environmental education. However, adopting the term socially critical environmental education helps foreground the social and critical nature of this approach to environmental education.

References

Bachor, D. (2000). Reformatting reporting methods for case studies. Retrieved 06 28, 2005, from http://www.aare.edu.au/00pap/bac00287.htm Google Scholar
Bell, M. (2000). Overcoming the barriers to effective environmental education in secondary schools. Unpublished Master Thesis. Griffith University.Google Scholar
Buchan, G. (2000). Obstacles to effective environmental education. Environmental Education and Information. 19(1), 110.Google Scholar
Capra, F. (1996). Deep ecology – A new paradigm. The Web of Life: A New Synthesis of Mind and Matter (pp. 313). London: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Chapman, S., McPhee, P., & Proudman, B. (1992). What is experiential education? The Journal of Experiential Education. 15(2), 623.Google Scholar
Clark, A. (1997). School principals' perceptions of environmental education in their Catholic primary schools in the Archdiocese of Brisbane. Unpublished Master Thesis. Griffith University.Google Scholar
Connell, S. (1997). I'm a 16 year old kid in a classroom. I've got all these views, but what can I do about them?: A qualitative study of Australian young people and their environmental attitudes. Unpublished Master Thesis. Griffith University.Google Scholar
Environment Australia. (2003). A curriculum review of environmental education. Retrieved 05 30, 2005, from http://www.deh.gov.au/education/publications/ee-review-schools.Google Scholar
Fien, J., & Gough, A. (1996). Environmental education. In Gilbert, R. (Ed.), Studying society and environment: A handbook for teachers (pp. 200216.). South Melbourne: Macmillan Education Australia.Google Scholar
Fien, J., & Tilbury, D. (1996). Learning for a sustainable environment: An agenda for teacher education in Asia and the Pacific (pp. 7-25). Bangkok: UNESCO Principal Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific.Google Scholar
Fien, J. (1991). Towards school-level curriculum inquiry in environmental education. Australian Journal of Environmental Education. 7, 1729.Google Scholar
Freebody, P. (2003). Qualitative research in education: Interaction and practice. London: SAGE Publications.Google Scholar
Gay, L., & Airasian, P. (2003). Educational research: Competencies for analysis and applications, 7th Edition. New Jersey: Merrill Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Gough, A. (2003). Making more of a scattering of small leaves. EQ Australia, 1, 2122.Google Scholar
Greenall Gough, A. (1992). Sustaining development of environmental education in National Political and Curriculum Priorities. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 8, 115131.Google Scholar
Hall, B., & Sullivan, E. (n.d.). Transformative learning: Contexts and practices. Awakening sleepy knowledge: Transformative learning in action. Final report of the transformative learning through environmental action project. Transformative Learning Project, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education: Toronto, in Community Environmental Education Reader (2001), Griffith University.Google Scholar
Hoepper, B. (1993). Greening the history curriculum. The Australian History Teacher, 20, 1118.Google Scholar
Holsman, R. (2001). The politics of environmental education. The Journal of Environmental Education. 32(2), 47.Google Scholar
Huckle, J. (1986). Ten red questions to ask green teachers. Green Teacher, 12, 1116.Google Scholar
Hunt, G. (1991). Mapping the environmental education curriculum – from the inside? Australian Journal of Environmental Education. 7, 99104.Google Scholar
Jickling, B., & Spork, H. (1998). Education for the environment: Acritique. Environmental Education Research. 4(3), 309327.Google Scholar
Jickling, B. (1992). Why I don't want my children to be educated for sustainable development? Journal of Environmental Education, 23(4), 58.Google Scholar
Kim, K. (2003). An inventory for assessing environmental education curricula. The Journal of Environmental Education. 34(2), 1218.Google Scholar
Lang, J. (2003). No school is an island: Environment and education. EQ Australia, 1, 79.Google Scholar
Lee, J., & Williams, M. (2001). Researching environmental education in the school curriculum: An introduction for students and teacher researchers. International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education. 10(3), 218244.Google Scholar
Maxwell, T., & Metcalfe, P. (1999/2000). Analysing environmental education curricula: The case of IBO's environmental systems. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 15/16, 7784.Google Scholar
Neuman, W. (2003). Social research methods: Qualitative and quantitative approaches, 5th Edition. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.Google Scholar
Orr, D. (1994). Earth in mind: On education, environment and the human prospect. Washington: Island Press.Google Scholar
Payne, P. (1999). Thinking the environment: The written epistemology of enquiry. Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 4, 243261.Google Scholar
Payne, P. (1995). Ontology and the critical discourse of environmental education. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 1, 83105.Google Scholar
Queensland Studies Authority. (2004). Modern history senior syllabus 2004. Brisbane: The State of Queensland.Google Scholar
Robottom, I. (1990). Environmental education: Reconstructing the curriculum for environmental responsibility. New Education, 12(1), 6177.Google Scholar
Sauvé, L. (1999). Environmental education between modernity and postmodernity: Searching for an integrating educational framework. Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 4, 949.Google Scholar
Silverman, D. (2001). Interpreting qualitative data: Methods for analysing talk, text and interaction, 2nd Edition. London: SAGE Publications.Google Scholar
Smyth, J. (1998). Environmental education – The beginning of the end or the end of the beginning? Environmental Communicator, 07/August.Google Scholar
Symes, C., & Preston, N. (1997). Schools and classrooms: A cultural studies analysis of education, 2nd Edition. South Melbourne: Addison Wesley Longman.Google Scholar
Taylor, T. (2000). The future of the past – Final report of the national inquiry into school history. The Faculty of Education, Monash University: Churchill. Retrieved 03 24, 2005, from http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/school_education/publications_resources/national_inquiry_into_school_history/the_future_of_the_past_final_report Google Scholar
The Age. (2003). History looks forward. Retrieved 06 25, 2005, from http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/05/14/1052885286195.html Google Scholar
Tilbury, D. (1995). Environmental education for sustainability: Defining the new focus of environmental education in the 1990's. Environmental Education Research, 1(2), 195212.Google Scholar
Tourtillott, L., & Britt, P. (1994). Evaluating environmental education materials. Ann Arbor: National Consortium for Environmental Education and Training.Google Scholar
Van Rossen, J. (1995). Conceptual analysis in environmental education: Why I want my children to be educated for sustainable development. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 11, 7381.Google Scholar
Walker, K. (1997). Challenging critical theory in environmental education. Environmental Education Research. 3(2), 155162.Google Scholar
Walsh, M. (1984). Environmental education: A decade of failure but some hope for the future. Australian Journal of Environmental Education. 1(1), 2124.Google Scholar
Yencken, D., Fien, J., & Sykes, H. (Eds.) (2000). Environment, education and society in the Asia-Pacific: Local traditions and global discourses. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, M., Callicott, J., Sessions, G., Warren, K., & Clark, J. (Eds.) (1993). Environmental philosophy: From animal rights to radical ecology. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar