
Field Trips in Environmental Education
Beschreibung
Weitere Details
Weitere Ausgaben
Inhalt
- Intro
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Chapter One Introduction
- I. Overview
- II. Structure of this book
- III. The scope of the problem - lack of global environmental science knowledge
- 1. The goals of environmental education
- 2. The general public's levels of environmental literacy
- 3. Environmental literacy of school-aged children
- IV. Limitations of a classroom environment for teaching global environmental science
- 1. EE is marginalized in the school curriculum
- 2. Discipline-based instruction does not fit the interdisciplinary nature of most environmental problems
- 3) Schools fail to inspire students (in contrast to mass marketing)
- 4) The mass media influence students, leaving them confused
- 5) Schools lack the media means to connect students emotionally with ab-stract global issues
- 6) Schools rarely provide opportunities to practice pro-environmental behavior
- V. The potential of out-of-school learning environments to teach global environmental science
- 1. What are out-of-school learning environments?
- 2. The function of out-of-school learning environments in environmental education
- VI. Field trip challenges
- 1. Settings target elementary students
- 2. Under- and overutilization
- 3. Teachers face a formidable task
- VII. The Integrated Experience Model - a framework for field trip planning
- 1. Overview
- 2. The Integrated Experience Model
- VIII. Purpose of the study
- Unbenannt
- Chapter Two Methods
- I. Overview
- II. Description of the case study
- 1. The setting - the Richard-Fehrenbach-Planetarium in Freiburg
- 2. The treatments: "Star Fusion Reactor Sun" and "The Climate Experiment"
- III. Research Design
- 1. The quantitative study
- 2. The qualitative study
- 3. Data analysis
- 4. Limitation of the study
- Chapter Three Results of the quantitative study
- I. Description of variables
- 1. Sample description
- 2. Descriptive statistics
- II. Analyzing the model
- 1. The total field-trip experience: A correlation analysis of model variables
- 2. Model variables (what are factors that influence the students' field trip experience?)
- III. Applying the model
- 1. Teachers and Students experienced the field trip differently
- 2. Influences of sex on the field trip experience
- 3. Age differences in the dynamic model
- IV. Summary of the results from the quantitative study
- Chapter Four The Qualitative Study: How teachers handled a field trip to an out-of-school learning venue for environmental science education
- I. To what degree was the field trip part of the classroom?
- 1. Were environmental aspects part of teachers' subjects?
- 2. Teacher environmental attitudes and concerns
- 3. Other out-of-school venues visited by teachers
- II. Field trip objectives
- 1. General reasons to go on field trips to out-of-school settings
- 2. Teachers' objectives to visit the planetarium that day
- 3. Goals for the planetarium visit
- III. Field trip management and the significance of the field trip
- 1. Preparation and integration
- 2. Informing the students, setting expectations
- 3. Students' content preparation
- 4. Teachers' assessment students' preparedness for the shows
- 5. Sources of information, and level of informedness
- 6. Teachers' expectations met or not
- 7. Students' expectations met or not
- 8. During the visit: Total reliance on the planetarium
- 9. Follow-up
- IV. Teachers' overall awareness and understanding of field trip pedagogy
- 1. Teachers' recommendations
- 2. Teachers' assessment of their own field trip practice
- V. Summary of the results for the teacher interviews
- Unbenannt
- Chapter Five Discussion
- I. The Integrated Experience Model as a framework for understanding field trip experiences of students
- II. Individual factors that influence students' and teachers' field trip experiences to out-of-school learning environments
- 1. The importance of setting objectives for the visit
- 2. Preparation
- 3. Receptivity or willingness to learn
- 4. (Breach of) Expectation
- 5. Environmental attitudes and awareness of the visiting students and teachers
- 6. Attitudes of visitors toward the setting
- 7. The out-of-school learning environment as "context" for the field trip
- 8. The overall impression: a raw assessment of the field trip
- 9. Short-term impact
- 10. Lasting impressions: recollection studies or what we remember from a field trip
- 11. Active transformation of short-term impacts into long-term impacts through follow-up activities
- 12. Long-term impact
- III. Education for Sustainability and the Integrated Experience Model
- 1. Education for Sustainability
- 2. The role of out-of-school settings in Education for Sustainability
- 3. Implications from the Integrated Experience Model for Education for Sustainability
- IV. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Summary
- Bibliography
- Appendices
- Appendix 1 - Interview guide and interview procedure
- Appendix 2 - Questionnaire 1 (Q1)
- Appendix 3 - Questionnaire 2 (Q2)
- Appendix 4 - Questionnaire 3 (Q3)
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