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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing all 12 results
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Scully, Alexa – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2012
Aboriginal/Indigenous education is being increasingly emphasized in Faculties of Education across Canada. Through self-study as an instructor of a mandatory course in Aboriginal education in a Faculty of Education, the author is exploring the use of local, place-based education in the fostering of cross-cultural understanding of Aboriginal and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Educators, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Canada Natives
Pedersen, Helena – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2011
This article seeks to contribute to the idea of "posthumanist education" by unfolding an educational situation where an assemblage of two humans and 33 former battery hens is gathered to carry out a so-called cognitive bias experiment for two days. A Deleuzian repertoire is set in motion to configure the dynamics of hens intervening in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, Educational Principles, Critical Theory
Jickling, Bob; Sauve, Lucie; Briere, Laurence; Niblett, Blair; Root, Emily – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2010
This paper contextualizes the 5th World Environmental Education Congress, discusses the theoretical underpinnings of the Congress theme "Earth Our Common Home," and relates this theorizing to the research project that was woven through the Congress. We provide a rationale for engaging in this research project, as an invitation for Congress…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, Research Projects, Intellectual Disciplines
Root, Emily – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2010
Across Canada, many Aboriginal peoples and communities are actively resisting environmental destruction and communicating to settler-Canadians traditions of respect for the land. Moreover, some Indigenous scholars and educators are calling for a foregrounding of Indigenous ways of knowing in environmental education for all students. However,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, Outdoor Education, Canada Natives
Piersol, Laura – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2010
In an effort to figure out what it means to educate "ecologically," I decided to track down some of the stories that I was living, telling and making as an educator. I ended up lost in the house of environmental education, stuck within the rooms of ecological science and political advocacy. Outside on the lawn sat the story of place based…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Story Telling, Adult Educators, Personal Narratives
Curthoys, Lesley P. – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2007
The School of Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism at Lakehead University offers a third-year course on ecological literacy. The course evolved from one with a predominant scientific approach to studying the bioregion to one that embraced a broader epistemological stance, giving greater authority, voice, and presence to nearby landscapes. This…
Descriptors: College Students, College Instruction, Land Use, Undergraduate Study
Campbell, Mora; Timmerman, Peter – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2007
The vast majority of literature and practices in environmental education focuses on places and spaces. Little attention has been paid to time and temporalities as elements of environments, and the ways in which how we experience time affects our experience of place. This paper is an examination of the ways in which reflection on time can be…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Workshops, Research Projects
Clark, Charlotte; Brody, Michael; Dillon, Justin; Hart, Paul; Heimlich, Joe – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2007
The unabashedly messy aspects of the research process are often hidden from published view, and are therefore not available to encourage and instruct. The authors tell specific stories about "messy" research, arranged around: (1) evolving research questions; (2) methodology or methods surprises; (3) problematic answers; and (4)publication…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Ethics, Research Problems, Research Needs
Leduc, Timothy B.; Warkentin, Traci – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2006
This paper reflects on the process of developing a pedagogy that uses experiential learning and disruption in environmental education practice to challenge students to develop critical thought. We examine our practice with university students in an "Environment and Culture" course, and focus on the processes that can transform disruption into an…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Environmental Education, Experiential Learning, College Students
Jickling, Bob – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2004
I propose that for ethics to become a normal activity, practiced by citizens on a daily basis, we begin by identifying barriers to this activity. Once things that get in the way have been identified, I examine ways that environmental educators can create conditions for ethics to become part of mainstream practices and processes of inquiry--to…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ethics, Barriers, Ethical Instruction
Robottom, Ian; Sauvee, Lucie – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2003
We reflect on methodological issues arising in two of our own research projects as a form of practice, as a way of engaging in a praxis of project research. The projects chosen for this purpose are themselves concerned with teacher education and curriculum development in environmental education: they include participatory "reflective practice"…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Participatory Research, Informal Education, Environmental Education
Wright, Tarah Sharon Alexandra – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2003
In 1991, sixteen Canadian universities endorsed the Halifax Declaration (HD) at the Conference on University Action for Sustainable Development in Halifax, Nova Scotia. This Declaration recognized the leadership role universities could play in a world at serious risk of irreparable environmental damage and asserted that universities must re-think…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Environmental Education, Universities, College Administration