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E-raamat: Teaching for EcoJustice: Curriculum and Lessons for Secondary and College Classrooms

(University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-May-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317564706
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 64,99 €*
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Teaching for EcoJustice is a unique resource for exploring the social roots of environmental problems in humanities-based educational settings and a curriculum guidebook for putting EcoJustice Education into practice. It provides model curriculum materials that apply the principles of EcoJustice Education, giving pre- and in-service teachers the ability to review examples of specific secondary and post-secondary classroom assignments, lessons, discussion prompts, and strategies that encourage students to think critically about how modern problems of sustainability and environmental destruction have developed, their root causes, and how they can be addressed. The author describes instructional methods she uses when teaching each lesson and shares insights from evaluations of the materials in her classroom and by other teachers. Interspersed between lessons is commentary about the rationale behind the materials and observations about their effect on students.

Arvustused

"This is a very timely book! The growing field of EcoJustice Education needs a book that helps teachers and teacher educators translate complex analytic material into classroom practices and lessons. We have been waiting for this book!"

Rebecca Martusewicz, Eastern Michigan University, USA

"This book translates academic and theoretical works on EcoJustice into accessible curricular materials designed to equip students to reflect critically on cultural roots of the environmental crisis unfolding on the planet. An important strength of the sample lesson plans is that they assume agency on the part of the teacher-reader to adjust these learning activities for student needs in specific contexts. Dr. Turner conveys a sense of respect for the teacher-readers professional judgment."

Teresa Shume, Minnesota State University Moorhead, USA

"This lively, relevant and timely text fills a need for practical work in EcoJustice Education."

Audrey M. Dentith, Lesley University, USA

Preface xi
Acknowledgments xvi
Introduction: Why Teach for EcoJustice? xvii
The Social Roots of Environmental Problems: Studying Text, Language, and Culture for EcoJustice xix
Teaching for EcoJustice in a Traditional Classroom: How EcoJustice Can Help Fulfill Standard Educational Goals xxiii
Pedagogy in the EcoJustice Classroom xxv
A Note about Terms xxx
Unit 1 Nature and the Self
1(22)
Lesson 1.1 Literature and Connection: Reading, Art, and Reflecting on Bonds with the Natural World
2(10)
Lesson 1.2 Writing the Connections that Shape Us
12(3)
Lesson 1.3 Poetry and Perspective: Writing Creatively to Imagine the Lives of Others
15(8)
Effect of the Lessons: Empathy and Relationship
19(2)
Unit 1 Readings and References
21(2)
Unit 2 Language, Media, and Worldviews
23(34)
Lesson 2.1 What We Believe: Examining Worldviews and Creation Stories
25(5)
Lesson 2.2 Masters, Stewards, Family: Cultural Metaphors for the Natural World
30(7)
Lesson 2.3 Language and Domination: How What We Say Shapes What We Believe about Others
37(5)
Lesson 2.4 Gender, Race, Species: Mutual Oppression
42(5)
Lesson 2.5 Media and Public Messages about the Environment: Critical Media Literacy for EcoJustice
47(10)
Effect of the Lessons: Critical Analysis of Discourse and Culture
52(2)
Unit 2 Readings and References
54(3)
Unit 3 Place
57(22)
Lesson 3.1 Sense of Place: The Meaning and Experience of Connecting to Place
59(7)
Lesson 3.2 Family History of Place
66(3)
Lesson 3.3 Digital Story of Place
69(10)
Effect of the Lessons: Ecological Identity and Connection to Place
75(3)
Unit 3 Readings and References
78(1)
Unit 4 Food
79(24)
Lesson 4.1 The Modern Food System: How We Produce, Sell, and Think about Food in the U.S.
81(6)
Lesson 4.2 Food Justice: Access, Oppression, and Cruelty in Modern Food Systems
87(6)
Lesson 4.3 Sustainable Food Movements
93(10)
Effect of the Lessons: Personal and Systemic Impacts, Interdependence, and Globalization
98(2)
Unit 4 Readings and References
100(3)
Unit 5 Stuff: Production, Consumption, and Waste
103(20)
Lesson 5.1 About Our Stuff: How Things Are Made and Consumed in the U.S.
105(5)
Lesson 5.2 Follow that Stuff: Profile of a Product
110(4)
Lesson 5.3 How Our Consumption Affects Others
114(9)
Effect of the Lessons: Consumer Culture and Impacts on Ecological Systems
118(2)
Unit 5 Readings and References
120(3)
Unit 6 Environmental Attitudes and Behaviors in U.S.-American History
123(22)
Lesson 6.1 Views of the Land in U.S.-American History
125(7)
Lesson 6.2 Views of the Land in Modern Environmental Debates
132(4)
Lesson 6.3 Digital Story: Personal History of Views of the Land
136(9)
Effect of the Lessons: Critical Historical and Cultural Perspectives
139(2)
Unit 6 Readings and References
141(4)
Unit 7 Ethics and Environmental Justice
145(22)
Lesson 7.1 Environmental Ethics: Thinking about Right and Wrong
147(6)
Lesson 7.2 Who Has Rights: Legal Rights for Humans and Nonhumans in the U.S. and Abroad
153(4)
Lesson 7.3 Environmental Justice: Who Feels the Impact of Environmental Problems the Most and Why
157(10)
Effect of the Lessons: Informed Ethical Thinking
161(3)
Unit 7 Readings and References
164(3)
Unit 8 Imagining Possible Futures
167(19)
Lesson 8.1 Imagining the Future: Views of Possible Futures in Literature and Film
169(6)
Lesson 8.2 Making New Futures: Strategies for Just and Sustainable Future Paths
175(4)
Lesson 8.3 Reimagining the Future: Envisioning Our Own Ideas of a Better Future
179(7)
Effect of the Lessons: Imagination and Creative Transformation
183(1)
Unit 8 Readings and References
184(2)
Conclusion: Final Thoughts on the Lessons 186(4)
List of Readings 190(42)
Index 232
Rita J. Turner, Ph.D., is a lecturer in American Studies and Media and Communication Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA.