Editorial

Stevenson, Robert B (2007) Editorial. Environmental Education Research, 13 (2). pp. 129-138.

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DOI: 10.1080/13504620701295668

View at Publisher Website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13504620701295...

Abstract

[Extract] This special issue of Environmental Education Research revisits arguments offered twenty years ago about the then‐documented gap between the rhetoric and philosophy of environmental education and the reality of practices in K–12 schooling. In Stevenson (1987), which is reproduced here as the first article, I argued that this gap should be expected given the traditional purposes and structures of schooling in western industrialised societies. In particular, I pointed out that the ideals expressed in international policy documents at the time for the practice of environmental education conflicted with the dominant curriculum and pedagogical practices of information transmission and the assimilation of unproblematic factual knowledge in schools. I offered an explanation of the dominant practices in terms of the historical purpose of schools, their structural organisation, the primacy of demands on teachers to maintain order and control, and teachers' ideological suppositions about knowledge, teaching and learning.

ID Code:19482
Item Type:Article (Editorial)
FoR Codes:13 EDUCATION > 1303 Specialist Studies in Education > 130399 Specialist Studies in Education not elsewhere classified @ 100%
SEO Codes:93 EDUCATION AND TRAINING > 9399 Other Education and Training > 939999 Education and Training not elsewhere classified @ 100%
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Last Modified:20 Dec 2011 18:01
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