Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School

In Botswana, participation in environmental learning activities has been perceived as a central component of environmental education in formal education. Driven by the need to implement the objective of making the participatory approach part of the infusion of environmental education in the school c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nthalevi Silo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Environmental Association of Southern Africa 2009-12-01
Series:Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
Online Access:https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/122820
id doaj-e46866f020954c43817dd2d5dcf9c13d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e46866f020954c43817dd2d5dcf9c13d2020-11-25T02:30:14ZengEnvironmental Association of Southern AfricaSouthern African Journal of Environmental Education2411-59592411-59592009-12-0126Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary SchoolNthalevi Silo0Rhodes University, South Africa/University of Botswana, Botswana In Botswana, participation in environmental learning activities has been perceived as a central component of environmental education in formal education. Driven by the need to implement the objective of making the participatory approach part of the infusion of environmental education in the school curriculum as prescribed by the infusion policy, Botswana schools have come up with initiatives to involve learners in environmental education activities that seem to have ‘a direct, perceived benefit to the learners’ (NEESAP, 2007:9). Within this approach it is expected that learners should participate in these activities. However, Ketlhoilwe (2007) revealed that there has been a normalisation of environmental education into existing school culture through equating waste-management activities with environmental education. This generally entails cleaning activities by learners to maintain ‘clean schools’, which is directly associated with environmental education. Drawing from detailed case study data in one rural primary school with Standard 6 learners, I used Cultural Historical Activity Theory to investigate and explain how learners participate in these waste-management activities. Findings from this study revealed that attempts by teachers to meet the policy imperative through prescription of rules, and ascribing roles to learners in waste-management activities, create tensions. This gave rise to an elusive object of learner participation, as the purpose for their participation in these activities is not clear.https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/122820
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nthalevi Silo
spellingShingle Nthalevi Silo
Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
author_facet Nthalevi Silo
author_sort Nthalevi Silo
title Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
title_short Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
title_full Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
title_fullStr Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Learner Participation in Waste-Management Activities in a Rural Botswana Primary School
title_sort exploring learner participation in waste-management activities in a rural botswana primary school
publisher Environmental Association of Southern Africa
series Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
issn 2411-5959
2411-5959
publishDate 2009-12-01
description In Botswana, participation in environmental learning activities has been perceived as a central component of environmental education in formal education. Driven by the need to implement the objective of making the participatory approach part of the infusion of environmental education in the school curriculum as prescribed by the infusion policy, Botswana schools have come up with initiatives to involve learners in environmental education activities that seem to have ‘a direct, perceived benefit to the learners’ (NEESAP, 2007:9). Within this approach it is expected that learners should participate in these activities. However, Ketlhoilwe (2007) revealed that there has been a normalisation of environmental education into existing school culture through equating waste-management activities with environmental education. This generally entails cleaning activities by learners to maintain ‘clean schools’, which is directly associated with environmental education. Drawing from detailed case study data in one rural primary school with Standard 6 learners, I used Cultural Historical Activity Theory to investigate and explain how learners participate in these waste-management activities. Findings from this study revealed that attempts by teachers to meet the policy imperative through prescription of rules, and ascribing roles to learners in waste-management activities, create tensions. This gave rise to an elusive object of learner participation, as the purpose for their participation in these activities is not clear.
url https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/122820
work_keys_str_mv AT nthalevisilo exploringlearnerparticipationinwastemanagementactivitiesinaruralbotswanaprimaryschool
_version_ 1724829143555637248