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Walking My Talk as an Intentional, Embodied, (Co)constructed Environmental Educator

thesis
posted on 2013-04-01, 00:00 authored by Peta J. White Peta J. White
Exploring the question (how) can I use personal change to inspire educational and social/cultural change, this work was embodied and action orientated with a thesis that the doing (action) is as important as the thinking and talking about it. A three-dimensional model of exploring personal change through transformative education leading to social/cultural change was employed throughout this research. A critical poststructural ecofeminist frame undergirded an autoethnographic self-study where I changed my living practices to become more sustainable while living within society, and used this as a platform for how I could become a better environmental educator and activist. I reduced my ecological footprint from 16.4HA to 1.8HA and taught a pre-service teacher course in environmental education, where I explored student resistances, power and relationships, a critique of curriculum, and personal change as a result of transformative education. One particular pedagogical strategy, the Action Learning Group Project, was developed and used to support others to undergo personal change through transformative education leading to social/cultural change. And finally, I use this work as an opportunity to undertake environmental education activism working to generate social/cultural change.

History

Material type

thesis

Resource type

thesis

Degree name

Ph. D.

Copyright notice

The author

Editor/Contributor(s)

P Hart

Faculty

Faculty of Arts and Education

School

School of Education