Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario

Food insecurity is on the rise worldwide and within Canada due to a myriad of factors such as climatic instability, rising food prices and unsustainable food production practices. In this context, educational systems (e.g. schools and universities) can contribute to developing knowledge and awarenes...

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Main Author: Valeri, Alishia Adele
Other Authors: Reis, Giuliano
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40719
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24947
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-407192020-07-15T07:09:31Z Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario Valeri, Alishia Adele Reis, Giuliano Barwell, Richard Food security Integration strategies Ways of thinking Teacher Education Environmental Education Ontario Curriculum Documents Food insecurity is on the rise worldwide and within Canada due to a myriad of factors such as climatic instability, rising food prices and unsustainable food production practices. In this context, educational systems (e.g. schools and universities) can contribute to developing knowledge and awareness of food insecurity as well as fostering new ways of thinking and engaging with food premised on just and sustainable food systems. This study is situated within the field of environmental education where there is a growing body of research at the intersections of food and the environment. Likewise, it was guided by the theoretical framing of EcoJustice Education, which offers a way of teaching and learning premised on the belief that our thoughts and actions can foster and enhance more social and ecologically equitable connections between food and the environment. By engaging in semi-structured interviews with teacher educators in select teacher education programs in Ontario and conducting document reviews, I investigated how the integration of the topic of food security is taking place—or not—in the initial training of future teachers in the province. The results showed that integration is not consistent across the different organizational levels of the programs investigated (i.e. whole-program level and classroom level). Moreover, the interviews with teacher educators revealed that any practices aiming at the integration of food security topics in BEd programs were primarily guided by a sustainable cultures perspective, which sees the world as having interconnected relationships amongst all living things. This view is supported by the data analysis of interviews with teacher educators, the Ontario Ministry of Education curriculum documents, and select course syllabi. On the other hand, the school curriculum documents contained conflicting views on the topic, including an understanding of the world as being based on hierarchized relationships. This research advances the field of environmental education by further adding to the limited scholarship on the topic of food security in the context of EE, as well as contributing to an account of food security education and EE with a focus on teacher education in Ontario. 2020-07-09T20:16:48Z 2020-07-09T20:16:48Z 2020-07-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40719 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24947 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Food security
Integration strategies
Ways of thinking
Teacher Education
Environmental Education
Ontario
Curriculum Documents
spellingShingle Food security
Integration strategies
Ways of thinking
Teacher Education
Environmental Education
Ontario
Curriculum Documents
Valeri, Alishia Adele
Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
description Food insecurity is on the rise worldwide and within Canada due to a myriad of factors such as climatic instability, rising food prices and unsustainable food production practices. In this context, educational systems (e.g. schools and universities) can contribute to developing knowledge and awareness of food insecurity as well as fostering new ways of thinking and engaging with food premised on just and sustainable food systems. This study is situated within the field of environmental education where there is a growing body of research at the intersections of food and the environment. Likewise, it was guided by the theoretical framing of EcoJustice Education, which offers a way of teaching and learning premised on the belief that our thoughts and actions can foster and enhance more social and ecologically equitable connections between food and the environment. By engaging in semi-structured interviews with teacher educators in select teacher education programs in Ontario and conducting document reviews, I investigated how the integration of the topic of food security is taking place—or not—in the initial training of future teachers in the province. The results showed that integration is not consistent across the different organizational levels of the programs investigated (i.e. whole-program level and classroom level). Moreover, the interviews with teacher educators revealed that any practices aiming at the integration of food security topics in BEd programs were primarily guided by a sustainable cultures perspective, which sees the world as having interconnected relationships amongst all living things. This view is supported by the data analysis of interviews with teacher educators, the Ontario Ministry of Education curriculum documents, and select course syllabi. On the other hand, the school curriculum documents contained conflicting views on the topic, including an understanding of the world as being based on hierarchized relationships. This research advances the field of environmental education by further adding to the limited scholarship on the topic of food security in the context of EE, as well as contributing to an account of food security education and EE with a focus on teacher education in Ontario.
author2 Reis, Giuliano
author_facet Reis, Giuliano
Valeri, Alishia Adele
author Valeri, Alishia Adele
author_sort Valeri, Alishia Adele
title Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
title_short Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
title_full Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
title_fullStr Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
title_full_unstemmed Educating About/for Food Security Through Environmental Education: A Qualitative Study of Teacher Education Programs in Ontario
title_sort educating about/for food security through environmental education: a qualitative study of teacher education programs in ontario
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40719
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24947
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