The emergence and institutional co-determination of sustainability as a teaching topic in interdisciplinary science teacher education

Klaus Rasmussen

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    This paper takes an institutional perspective on the topic of sustainability in order to analyse how this ‘idea’ enters science teacher education through an interdisciplinary approach. It shows how the development and implementation of a course for Danish pre-service teachers was conditioned and constrained by a complex web of interactions in and among the teaching disciplines of biology, geography and physics/chemistry and among the institutions of school, teacher college and university. The data collected are used to identify influences among the disciplines as well as disciplinary differences, conceptualised through a new reference model that separates the analysis from the usual sustainability dimensions. The findings reveal how sustainability as a teaching topic can be a unifying idea in an interdisciplinary setting. Disciplinary differences evidently impact course planning and implementation significantly, but not exclusively. By elaborating on the interactions between these circumstances, the paper provides insight into the processes of developing interdisciplinary teacher education
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalEnvironmental Education Research
    Volume23
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)348-364
    Number of pages17
    ISSN1350-4622
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 16 Mar 2017

    Keywords

    • schools, courses and institutions
    • didactic transposition
    • institutional perspective
    • science education
    • sustainability

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