Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training

This article explores experienced primary teachers views on teaching for ‘reading nature’. The concept ‘reading nature’ has to do with an ability to recognise organisms and relate them to material cycling and energy flow in the specific habitat which is to be read. It has to do with the natural world...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ola Magntorn, Gustav Helldén
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: University of Oslo 2012-10-01
Series:Nordina: Nordic Studies in Science Education
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/nordina/article/view/415
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spelling doaj-ac11e06438f749a48cf68c2f1805a7212020-11-25T02:45:14ZdanUniversity of OsloNordina: Nordic Studies in Science Education1504-45561894-12572012-10-012310.5617/nordina.415Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher trainingOla Magntorn0Gustav Helldén1Kristianstad UniversityKristianstad UniversityThis article explores experienced primary teachers views on teaching for ‘reading nature’. The concept ‘reading nature’ has to do with an ability to recognise organisms and relate them to material cycling and energy flow in the specific habitat which is to be read. It has to do with the natural world that we face outside and the tools we have are our experiences from previous learning situations both in and out-of-doors. The teachers were asked to comment on the content of a CD-ROM with teaching sequences from a primary class studying a river ecosystem. Perceptions that teachers held were found to be supportive but complex and varied regarding the possibilities and advantages of implementing this type of teaching design in the everyday classroom. The paper finishes by identifying some implications for teacher training to support fieldwork and ecological literacy in primary schools in the future.https://journals.uio.no/nordina/article/view/415
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ola Magntorn
Gustav Helldén
spellingShingle Ola Magntorn
Gustav Helldén
Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
Nordina: Nordic Studies in Science Education
author_facet Ola Magntorn
Gustav Helldén
author_sort Ola Magntorn
title Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
title_short Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
title_full Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
title_fullStr Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
title_full_unstemmed Reading Nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
title_sort reading nature- experienced teachers’ reflections on a teaching sequence in ecology: implications for future teacher training
publisher University of Oslo
series Nordina: Nordic Studies in Science Education
issn 1504-4556
1894-1257
publishDate 2012-10-01
description This article explores experienced primary teachers views on teaching for ‘reading nature’. The concept ‘reading nature’ has to do with an ability to recognise organisms and relate them to material cycling and energy flow in the specific habitat which is to be read. It has to do with the natural world that we face outside and the tools we have are our experiences from previous learning situations both in and out-of-doors. The teachers were asked to comment on the content of a CD-ROM with teaching sequences from a primary class studying a river ecosystem. Perceptions that teachers held were found to be supportive but complex and varied regarding the possibilities and advantages of implementing this type of teaching design in the everyday classroom. The paper finishes by identifying some implications for teacher training to support fieldwork and ecological literacy in primary schools in the future.
url https://journals.uio.no/nordina/article/view/415
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