Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners

Shaping environmental values is considered one of the goals of environmental education. At the same time, this creates questions about the line between indoctrination and education. While values education has been widely discussed from various theoretical perspectives, few studies have analyzed how...

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Main Authors: Jan Činčera, Bruce Johnson, Roman Kroufek, Petra Šimonová
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/11/4700
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spelling doaj-0d76d6512721423eb0953293bf70ca342020-11-25T02:39:56ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-06-01124700470010.3390/su12114700Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of PractitionersJan Činčera0Bruce Johnson1Roman Kroufek2Petra Šimonová3Department of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, 60200 Brno, Czech RepublicUniversity of Arizona, College of Education, 1430 E. Second Street, Tucson, AZ 85721, USADepartment of Preschool and Primary Education, Faculty of Education, Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem, 40096 Ústí nad Labem, Czech RepublicDepartment of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, 60200 Brno, Czech RepublicShaping environmental values is considered one of the goals of environmental education. At the same time, this creates questions about the line between indoctrination and education. While values education has been widely discussed from various theoretical perspectives, few studies have analyzed how it is being practiced. This article investigates five outdoor environmental education programs and identifies the values the programs promote as well as the means they use to communicate these values to students. Additionally, the article examines the perspectives of 17 program leaders and center directors regarding the ways in which values should be promoted in environmental education and the approaches they use in their practice. According to the findings, all the observed programs applied a normative, value-laden approach, communicating mainly the values of universalism. The most frequently observed strategy was the inculcation of desirable values by moralizing and modeling. Simultaneously, some of the leaders’ beliefs, while highlighting value-free or pluralistic approaches, contradicted their rather normative practice. This article describes the theory–practice gap identified and discusses the implications of the prevailing use of the normative approach in outdoor environmental education for the field. It calls for opening an in-depth debate on what, why, and how values belong in outdoor environmental education practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/11/4700valuesenvironmental educationoutdoor programsqualitative
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Činčera
Bruce Johnson
Roman Kroufek
Petra Šimonová
spellingShingle Jan Činčera
Bruce Johnson
Roman Kroufek
Petra Šimonová
Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
Sustainability
values
environmental education
outdoor programs
qualitative
author_facet Jan Činčera
Bruce Johnson
Roman Kroufek
Petra Šimonová
author_sort Jan Činčera
title Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
title_short Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
title_full Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
title_fullStr Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
title_full_unstemmed Values Education in Outdoor Environmental Education Programs from the Perspective of Practitioners
title_sort values education in outdoor environmental education programs from the perspective of practitioners
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Shaping environmental values is considered one of the goals of environmental education. At the same time, this creates questions about the line between indoctrination and education. While values education has been widely discussed from various theoretical perspectives, few studies have analyzed how it is being practiced. This article investigates five outdoor environmental education programs and identifies the values the programs promote as well as the means they use to communicate these values to students. Additionally, the article examines the perspectives of 17 program leaders and center directors regarding the ways in which values should be promoted in environmental education and the approaches they use in their practice. According to the findings, all the observed programs applied a normative, value-laden approach, communicating mainly the values of universalism. The most frequently observed strategy was the inculcation of desirable values by moralizing and modeling. Simultaneously, some of the leaders’ beliefs, while highlighting value-free or pluralistic approaches, contradicted their rather normative practice. This article describes the theory–practice gap identified and discusses the implications of the prevailing use of the normative approach in outdoor environmental education for the field. It calls for opening an in-depth debate on what, why, and how values belong in outdoor environmental education practice.
topic values
environmental education
outdoor programs
qualitative
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/11/4700
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