posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00authored byT Williamson, David Jones, S Shannon, A Radford
Between 2007 and 2010 a series of intensive annual field trips took around 100 predominantly city-based Australian and international students from The University of Adelaide into rural communities (numbers ranged from 82 in 2007 to 105 in 2009). Country areas/towns (rather than the city) were chosen because in them issues of sustainability are ‘in your face’ and much clearer for students to comprehend than in the city. The trips required co-operation between the respective communities, the School and the students. The organization required for this number of students was time-consuming and prone to disruption, and the series ended when the principal organisers moved on to new positions and the School reverted to less time-costly modes of teaching. This paper provides a retrospective insight into the series of field trips and examines their educational and professional value for the participants – students, staff and communities. We begin by describing the aims of the course and argument for an immersive educational approach, then present the logistics and process for the field trips, discuss the outcomes for the stakeholders, and finally present some conclusions.
History
Location
Kampala, Uganda
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Pagination
219 - 223
Start date
2012-06-25
End date
2012-06-30
Title of proceedings
SFC 2012 : Proceedings of Sustainable Futures Architecture and Urbanism in the Global South conference
Event
Sustainable Futures Architecture and Urbanism in the Global South. Conference (2012 : Kampala, Uganda)