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Children Environment representation at primary school

Children Environment representation at primary school. Sabrina Pandolfi Paola Nicolini. Department of training, cultural heritage and tourism, University of Macerata, C.da Vallebona, 62100 Macerata, Italy

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Children Environment representation at primary school

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  1. Children Environment representation at primary school Sabrina Pandolfi Paola Nicolini • Department of training, cultural heritage and tourism, University of Macerata, C.da Vallebona, 62100 Macerata, Italy Department of Humanistic studies,University of Macerata, Via Garibaldi n°20, 62100 Macerata, Italy

  2. Evaluating processes • In environmental representation

  3. What kind of environment concept we referred to? • …a dinamic system of reciprocal interactions among physical, biological and socio-cultural dimensions (Bonnes, Bonaiuto & Lee, 2004; Birbes, 2006)

  4. Aim of the research To analyze and describe children’s conceptions about environment We would like to thank the headmistress of IC “L.Lanzi “of Corridonia, the teachers Cinzia Mazzaferro, Tiziana Mercuri, Rossana Morresi, Maria Pia Rignicolo, Giovanna Salsiccia and children of first class of primary schools “L.Lanzi” and “San Claudio”.

  5. Survey instruments Cognitive maps and Drawings

  6. The main categories of elements individuated in drawings and maps

  7. Drawings can contain: only social elements; physical elements plus biological elements; physical elements plus social elements; biological elements plus social elements; physical, biological and social elements.

  8. Results There are works in which environment is purely considered as social

  9. There are works in which environment is purely considered as social

  10. Physical plus biological representation of environment

  11. Physical plus biological representationofenvironment

  12. Physical elements plus social elements

  13. Physical elements plus social elements

  14. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  15. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  16. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  17. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  18. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  19. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  20. Environment represented with physical, biological and social elements

  21. Number of drawings codified with the categories identified and their combinations

  22. Results Children mainly use all kinds of elements – physical, biological and social (56/73). • For the 7 years old environment is represented through different dimensions, even if these elements seem to be just one next to the other, without an actual interaction.

  23. Results • We can state that at this age children refer to the environment as an ensamble of objects, with a low level of awareness about the reciprocal interactions between human beigns and the environment. In a previous research, with children 8-9 aged we collected data in which we could see signals of interaction (i.e.. cultivation, presence of waste bins, maintenance of green).

  24. Conclusions In most of the Italian schools Environmental education is about giving information, listing rules and suggesting the right behaviours (rational, scientific approach, ecological literacy) We suggest to turn this approach into a more practical one involving children in an olistic way, through cogntion but also emotions, perceptions and so on

  25. From a teaching process centred on teacher-student relationship to the interactions between student and all the environments that he/she is requested to explore (Bardulla, 2006)

  26. Methodological suggestions • Collecting children ideas, representations, understandings • Asking for the collaboration of a specific expert (as in Progetto Grotte) • Using discussion as a co-construction of knowledge and tool of conceptual change

  27. Thank you! Sabrina Pandolfi – Paola Nicolini sabrina.pandolfi@unimc.it

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