Deakin University
Browse

Towards an understanding of how school climate strikes work as public pedagogy

Version 2 2024-05-31, 06:42
Version 1 2023-12-19, 03:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-31, 06:42 authored by Bronwyn Sutton
PurposeSchool climate strikes are opening spaces of appearance, becoming differently active forms of public pedagogy where new and previously unthought collective climate action is possible. This inquiry contributes to understanding school climate strikes as important forms of climate justice activism by exploring how they work as public pedagogy.Design/methodology/approachThe inquiry process involved poetic inquiry to produce an affective poetic witness statement to an event of school climate strikes, and then a performative enactment of diffractive reading using the poem created. The diffractive reading is used to conceptualise school climate strikes as public pedagogy and move towards an understanding of how school climate strikes work as public pedagogy. Diffused throughout is the question of where the more-than-human fits in public pedagogy and youth climate justice activism.FindingsSchool climate strikes are dynamic and differently acting (diffracting) public pedagogies that work by open spaces of appearance that enable capacities for collective action in heterogeneous political spaces. Consideration of entanglements and intra-actions between learner, place, knowledge and climate change are productive in understanding how phenomena work as public pedagogy.Originality/valueThis inquiry extends on important considerations in both climate change education and public pedagogy scholarship. It diffuses consideration of the more-than-human throughout the inquiry and enacts a move beyond the humanist limits of existing public pedagogy scholarship by introducing climate intra-action, heterogeneous political spaces and non-conforming learning to an understanding of activist public pedagogies and the educative agent.

History

Related Materials

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Qualitative Research Journal

Volume

24

Pagination

65-79

ISSN

1443-9883

eISSN

1448-0980

Issue

1

Publisher

Emerald

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC