Environment, Ethics and Cultures

Design and Technology Education's Contribution to Sustainable Global Futures

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This collection engages environmental, ethical and cultural values perspectives to show how Design and Technology (D&T) Education actively contributes to the significant educational goal of attaining sustainable global futures.
An international collection of authors representing all levels of education articulate how D&T research, curriculum theory, policy, and classroom practices can synergise to contribute positively to the education of children for sustainable global futures. The book offers a spectrum of theorised curriculum positions, political and policy analysis, and case studies of successful school practice.
A key word in the title is that of contribution which is construed in several senses: first, of D&T as a vehicle for understanding the range of political and social values that arise with such a major educational challenge; second, of D&T as an agent of critical and practical action for students as global citizens; third, by taking global and multiple perspectives (rather than, say, Western or mono-cultural positions); and, fourth, by demonstrating D&T’s capacities for working in holistic and integrative cross-curricular ways.
The authors show how students can not only learn about their potential as humans-as-designers but can also develop designerly capacities that enable them to contribute meaningfully in practical ways to their communities and to wider society, that is, as global citizens who can apply design capability in ethical ways that are respectful of peoples, cultures and environments alike.

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Environment
Contributions of Design and Education to the Sustainment of Planet Earth
Pages: 15–31
Culture in Design, Technology, and Environment
Reflecting on Field Experiences
Pages: 53–63
In(di)geneity in Design and Technology Education
Animating an Ecological Cross-Cultural Conversation
Pages: 65–85
Design and Technology Education for Sustainable Futures
In Preparation for Global Citizenship
Pages: 87–99
Designing for Cultural Groups and Humanization
Two Ideas from Design Anthropology
Pages: 101–117
Agency and Understanding
The Learner as a Sustainable Designer
Pages: 119–132
Policy Formulation and Enactment
Linked up Thinking?
Pages: 133–152
Sustaining Pedagogical Practice to Promote Productive Problem Solving
Lighting a Fire Rather Than Filling a Bucket
Pages: 175–190
Kartogrifa In-Flux
A Pedagogical Tool to Challenge Eurocentrism in Post-Complusory Education for Sustainable Design
Pages: 191–205
A Case Study of Education for Sustainable Development
The Case of Design and Technology in Botswana
Pages: 207–217
The Shoe Show
Using Simulation and Role-Play as Ways of Exposing and Questioning Learners’ Tacit Attitudes to Themselves as Ethical Consumers
Pages: 219–230
With Head, Hand, and Heart
Children Address Ethical Issues of Design in Technology Education
Pages: 231–243
“We Have to Create a Way to Catch Flashes in Order to Get Electricity”
Creative Ideas in Children’s Perception of Climate Change: An Innovation Potential for a Sustainable Future
Pages: 261–270
Sustainability + Fun = A Change in Behaviour
How Much Fun Is There in the World? Is It Finite? So, Should We Be Using More of It to Teach Students about Things that Are?
Pages: 271–284
Opening up the Four Walls
Reflections on Two South Australian ESD Projects
Pages: 285–298
Index
Pages: 305–326
Educational Researchers and their students
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