Literature DB >> 24382985

Teaching Environmental Health Science for Informed Citizenship in the Science Classroom and Afterschool Clubs.

Alla Keselman1, Daniel M Levin2, Savreen Hundal3, Judy F Kramer4, Karen Matzkin4, Gale Dutcher1.   

Abstract

In the era of growing concerns about human-induced climate change and sustainable development, it is important for the schools to prepare students for meaningful engagement with environmental policies that will determine the future of our society. To do this, educators need to face a number of challenges. These include deciding on the science knowledge and skills needed for informed citizenship, identifying teaching practices for fostering such knowledge and skills, and finding ways to implement new practices into the tightly packed existing curriculum. This paper describes two collaborative efforts between the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) and University of Maryland College of Education that attempt to meet these challenges. The focus of both projects is on helping students develop information seeking and evaluation and argumentation skills, and applying them to complex socio-scientific issues that have bearing on students' daily lives. The first effort involves co-designing an afterschool environmental health club curriculum with an interdisciplinary team of middle school teachers. The second effort is the development and implementation of a week-long school drinking water quality debate activity in a high school environmental science classroom. Both projects center on Tox Town, an NLM web resource that introduces students to environmental health issues in everyday environments. The paper describes successes and challenges of environmental health curriculum development, including teachers' and researchers' perception of contextual constraints in the club and classroom setting, tensions inherent in co-design, and students' experience with socio-scientific argumentation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Environmental Health; Informed Citizenship; Middle Schools; Science Education; Science for All; Socio-Scientific Issues

Year:  2012        PMID: 24382985      PMCID: PMC3875328     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Sci Soc


  2 in total

1.  A safe operating space for humanity.

Authors:  Johan Rockström; Will Steffen; Kevin Noone; Asa Persson; F Stuart Chapin; Eric F Lambin; Timothy M Lenton; Marten Scheffer; Carl Folke; Hans Joachim Schellnhuber; Björn Nykvist; Cynthia A de Wit; Terry Hughes; Sander van der Leeuw; Henning Rodhe; Sverker Sörlin; Peter K Snyder; Robert Costanza; Uno Svedin; Malin Falkenmark; Louise Karlberg; Robert W Corell; Victoria J Fabry; James Hansen; Brian Walker; Diana Liverman; Katherine Richardson; Paul Crutzen; Jonathan A Foley
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-09-24       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Educating Young People about Environmental Health for Informed Social Action.

Authors:  Alla Keselman; Daniel M Levin; Judy F Kramer; Karen Matzkin; Gale Dutcher
Journal:  Umw Gesundh Online       Date:  2011
  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  COVID-19 and lockdown schooling: how digital learning environments influence semantic structures and sustainability knowledge.

Authors:  Sonja T Fiedler; Thomas Heyne; Franz X Bogner
Journal:  Discov Sustain       Date:  2021-07-25
  1 in total

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