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Humour and learning

Is humour a distraction or a major component in students’ learning?

Funny picture of pinguin on sandy beach with plant - Climate change

This funny picture of a penguin on a beech looking on a little plant growing up of the sand is a helpful starter for communication about climate change and if climate change has anything with us to do.

It is said that a good laughter is very healthy for all aspects of live. I believe that and like to include humoristic elements in my teaching and in my lectures. But how to use humour to enhance the learning and how to avoid that jokes and joyful elements isn’t taking over the main content to focus on?

Learning and teaching are social processes and therefore the atmosphere of the learning is very important. As humour has a tendency to reduce stress and anxiety just these effects might be enough to advocate relevant humour in your lessons.

But we have to be aware of the fact that the talent for humour isn’t distributed evenly among students or among teachers. It can happen that all in class are smiling or laughing but only some know why.

Funny pictures and cartoons build on understanding

You have to understand something to see the funny things in a cartoon or a joke. Like in the penguin picture here. Of cause it is a manipulated photo created by combining 2 or 3 photos together to form what could also be a cartoon made by an artist. But the picture’s origin from photographs is strengthening our attention because photographs have the privilege to function as documentation.

In most people’s understanding penguins are associated with icebergs and Antarctic waters and therefore the movement of the head and neck of the penguin gives the picture a twist, so to speak that can be interpreted in a humoristic way.

The use of creativity to develop humour

Until now we have been dealing with humour and funny pictures as elements coming in from the outside to the learning situation. But a much better way of supporting students’ learning might be to give them the task to create their own ideas of funny cartoons or jokes, but in a framework demarked by you.

For example I used this set-up in one of my thematic textbooks (‘Miljø og genbrug in Danish). I had realised that most cartoons and jokes about stranded people on uninhabited islands build on the mechanism of scarce resources. As this is an important point in environmental education (EE) as well as in education for sustainable development (ESD) I present the young readers for one example of such a funny cartoon and invite the students to be creative and develop their own funny cartoons with uninhabited islands with stranded people.

In such a way it is possible to enhance the engagement among the learners by stimulating their creative thoughts and at the same time get a serious issue on the main agenda – the scarce resources of the world.

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The progressive development of environmental education in Sweden and Denmark - New research paper

Just published:

‘The progressive development of environmental education in Sweden and Denmark’

By Soren Breiting and  Per Wickenberg
Abstract of  ‘The progressive development of environmental education in Sweden and Denmark’
Our paper traces the history and progressive development of environmental education and education for sustainable development (ESD) in Sweden and Denmark. Our main focus is on work in primary and lower secondary schools as part of a search for trends of international interest related to the conceptualisation and practice of environmental education and ESD in both countries, as well as the role and significance of democratic perspectives to their development.
Traditionally, Sweden has a more centralised approach to change compared to a more decentralised approach in Denmark. Accordingly, the interplay between the State, the individual and private initiatives has differed over the past half-century, and this has given rise to interesting effects on the development of environmental education as well as ESD.
The discussion of their development in Sweden draws on historical, political and organisational perspectives, while for Denmark, we focus on how these perspectives relate to a series of challenges; for example, the epistemological challenge of the development of environmental education that resulted in ‘the new generation of environmental education’, and the effects of taking an action competence approach to environmental education.
In both countries the links between the development of environmental education and ESD and the discourse of environmental protection and democracy are highlighted, as are the interplays between the State’s agenda on education, the actions of research institutions, and the provision of in-service teacher training.
Sweden has become a world leader in initiatives for ESD promotion and joint efforts to spur innovations and clarification of ESD, while Denmark has mainly put its efforts into developing science education, and in this regard, has sacrificed the development of ESD.
In
Environmental Education Research, Volume 16, Issue 1 February 2010 , pages 9 – 37, See more at

Keywords: education for sustainable development;  ESD;  general education;  school education;  new education;  democracy

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Copenhagen Accord the COP15 result in Copenhagen, Denmark Dec 2009

Yvo de Boer at COP 15 closing press briefing in Copenhagen on YouTube video

Yvo de Boer said an accord has been reached that has significant elements, but that it is not legally binding.

The Copenhagen Accord is saying

The Heads of State, Heads of Government, Ministers, and other heads of delegation present at the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 in Copenhagen, ……..

….  Have agreed on this Copenhagen Accord which is operational immediately.

1.   We underline that climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time. We
emphasise our strong political will to urgently combat climate change in accordance with the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities.

To achieve the ultimate objective of the Convention to stabilize greenhouse gas concentration in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system, we shall, recognizing the scientific view that the increase in global temperature should be below 2 degrees Celsius, on the basis of equity and in the context of sustainable development, enhance our long-term cooperative action to combat climate change.

We recognize the critical impacts of climate change and the potential impacts of response measures on countries particularly vulnerable to its adverse effects and stress the need to establish a comprehensive adaptation programme including international support.”

Read on to get the full text of the Copenhagen Accord at http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2009/cop15/eng/l07.pdf

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Interview of Soren Breiting about Climate Change and Education for Sustainable Development

Education for Sustainable Development special issue of Quarterly with interviews of Soren Breiting and Karsten Schnack

Education for Sustainable Development special issue of Quarterly with interviews of Soren Breiting and Karsten Schnack

“There is no simple solution in merely teaching people to act differently. The solution is rather to empower citizens to make informed choices in a complex and rapidly changing world.”

This statement by Professor Lars Qvortrup, Dean of the Danish School of Education, Aarhus University, in Copenhagen, Denmark is introducing this special issue of Quarterly about Education for Sustainable Development and the challenge of climate change.

“No child is too small to work with ESD”

This is the headline of the joint interview with Soren Breiting and Karsten Schnack, both from the Research Programme for Environmental and Health Education at DPU, Aarhus University.

From the interview, done by

Torben Clausen
Quarterly@dpu.dk

… Here is Pedro. He is ten years old, and lives inGuatemala. Pedro and his parents are Indian. Pedro’s favourite dish is fish, which is the best food his family can afford, and when he goes to school, he has to walk there.
Pedro looks different from other children. His feet are as long as his arms and legs, and his arms seem to grow from his hips. His clothes reveal that they were made by crayons. Pedro’s ID card was not produced by the Guatemalan authorities. It was made by a Danish pupil in the third grade, who invented the character Pedro. The only aim Pedro has is to help Danish pupils to think in terms of sustainable development.

A broad concept
The character Pedro was developed for an ESD -course in a third grade in Denmark. With Pedro as a focal point, Danish teachers have helped even the youngest pupils reflect on the differences between living in an affluent country like Denmark and a developing one such as Guatemala. There have been discussions about the differences in living conditions and everyday life, social tensions and conflicts between impoverished indigenous people and wealthy groups in society, the dependency on natural resources and the environment, the different opportunities for development of the two countries, and the vast difference in individuals’ opportunities for influence.

As such, Pedro is a sort of embodiment of how broad the concept of ESD can be. ESD concerns so much more than merely teaching about the environment and natural sciences, according to Søren Breitling from the Danish School of Education, Aarhus University:

“ESD entails a recognition of the complex interactions between the social, economical and ecological issues. It involves important issues such as conflict analysis, global awareness and teaching about the environment.”
Pedro is part of a development project which Søren Breitling has conducted in collaboration with another colleague from the Danish School of Education, Professor Karsten Schnack. Four schools in four different cities were involved in the project, which encompassed children in third, seventh and eighth grade.

What does an Indian get for Christmas?

Pedro had clothes for Christmas. When you are an Indian child in Guatemala, you don’t get fancy toys, you get something you need. The contrast with the Danish pupils’ own lists of expensive unnecessary electronic toys is obvious at a glance. This exercise stimulates the pupils to reflect on the differences in living conditions. The project has demonstrated that even the smallest pupils can reflect and reason rationally about the basic differences that a sustainable development must take into account.

“Some may question whether third-graders aren’t too young to relate to issues on that scale. Should they not be spared? The teachers in the classes we observed started various activities that made the pupils identify with the Guatemalan children. One exercise involved counting how many of the pupils’ toys required electricity and it really drove home the differences.

This shows that no child is too small to work with ESD ,” says Søren Breiting.
The ability to imagine oneself in the other’s place is central to the way the two researchers interpret ESD . Our situation is a product of a historical development. Everything could easily be very different now. In the same way, the future is not fixed, but is shaped by what we do now, all of us. Major challenges such as social inequality and ecological disasters are not set in stone, but topics for discussion and exploration: How can we avert the dire consequences? The aim is to increase the pupils’ action competence:

“The concept of ‘sustainable development’ emphasizes the temporal aspect. Embedded in the concept ‘action competence’ is a political recognition of the fact that those who act help shape the future. The teaching method must reflect that,” Karsten Schnack says.

One way to do this is through project work, where the pupils assume ownership of a problem they address. The pupils in third grade found a good use for mathematics, when they tried to figure out how much space they had in their homes compared to Pedro.

Children in the eighth grade made dolls that represented their grandchildren, which made the students reflect on the challenges of future generations. The real winner was a questionnaire about Guatemala that was given to the third-grader’s parents. The responses demonstrated that the pupils knew more about Guatemala and the differences between that country and Denmark than their parents did. This type of activity sparks enthusiasm, which is a lead-in to action.

Read more of the interview with Soren Breiting and Karsten Schnack about Education for Sustainable Development and Climate change Click here (Free download in new window)

Here is the list of the complete content in this special issue about Education for Sustainable Delopment and Climate Change education CCE:

CLIMATE CHANGE AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT – THE RESPONSE FROM EDUCATION

How can education be a means to sustainable development?
The climate crisis CALLS FOR a new educational era

The International Alliance of Leading Education Institutes is analysing the role that education ought to play in a world struggling with climate change.
Professor Jeppe Læssøe talks about the initial findings.

The emotions of change
The debate about climate change is accompanied by feelings of loss, fear and tragedy. This should be reconsidered for the sake of education, says Associate Professor Noah Feinstein.

BEST CASES AROUND THE GLOBE

The tiger turns turns green
Korea’s master plan for the next six decades is Green Growth. To begin with, the focus is on growth rather than sustainability, but investment in education could turn the picture around, says Dr. Chankook Kim.

CHINA’S ‘RECYCLING ECONOMY’ – FROM PAPER TO PRACTICE
Climate change and sustainability are hot topics in China, but it is hard to find research addressing the outcomes of Education for Sustainable Development, says Associate Professor Yi Jin.

SNAPSHOTS FROM A LEADING ECO-CITY
The government of Singapore wants to make Singapore the leading Eco-city in Asia. Professor Kim Chuan Goh explains why this might be

Sustainability should be a university’s badge of honour

Sustainability has been on the agenda at universities for years, but so far most of the changes have been to the daily operations of university infrastructure, says Dr. Dianne Chambers.

No child is too small to work with ESD
Even children in the third grade can learn through Education for Sustainable Development, because ESD develops their ability to address open questions, two Danish researchers say.

Download the full publication  about Education for Sustainable Development and Climate change Click here (Free download in new window)

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Follow Soren Breiting on Twitter: Travel, Birding, Photography, Marketing, Education, Internet

Click on the Twitter picture and follow me on Twitter to get serious tips and tricks related to the activities of Soren Breiting.

Follow me on Twitter and get updates about Travel, Birding, Photography, Marketing, Education, Internet and other matters of importance for many, see here: http://twitter.com/sorenbreiting

If you are Danish speaking follow Søren Breiting on Twitter here about tips and goodies for photography, teaching and education, bird watching and travel, especially to exotic islands. Twitter.com/soerenbreiting

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Mental Ownership and Participation for Innovation in Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development

Keywords for this paper (Chapter in Book): mental ownership, psychological ownership, environmental education, action-competence models, research:

Mental Ownership and Participation for Innovation in Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development

The chapter Mental Ownership and Participation for Innovation in Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development is published in the book Participation and Learning.

The chapter Mental Ownership and Participation for Innovation in Environmental Education and Education for Sustainable Development is published in the book Participation and Learning.

What specific qualities make participation genuine, and how do they link with a democratic view of education, cooperation, and empowerment?

This chapter explores these themes, linking reflections on existing theoretical perspectives on the ‘ownership of participation’ with professional experience and research on educational development initiatives in a number of countries around the world (mainly Thailand, Namibia, and Denmark).

In particular, the chapter argues that while the process of developing ‘mental ownership’ is a neglected aspect of successful participatory approaches in development efforts as well as in education, there is good reason to consider the hypothesis that the level of mental ownership that a participatory initiative is able to generate among participants, corresponds with the experienced quality of the participatory approach.

In so doing, the chapter discusses the potential value of generating mental ownership in participation for improving the quality of different approaches to innovation in education, and illustrates wider debates on the need to democratise environmental education and Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), and whether educational goals should be principally regarded as addressing adaptation or emancipation (e.g. Hellesnes 1982).

Author:  Soren Breiting,
Danish School of Education, University of Aarhus, Tuborgvej 164, DK-2400 Copenhagen, NV, Denmark

In the book
Participation and Learning
Perspectives on Education and the Environment, Health and Sustainability

Alan Reid, Bjarne Bruun Jensen, Jutta Nikel and Venka Simovska (Eds.)
Springer Netherlands 2008.

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Avoid non-latin letters in your name for international use

You should avoid non-latin letters in your name for international use, as that will only give problems for yourself and for your partners and colleagues.

As a Dane I have the letter ‘Ø in my first name SØREN. But I soon realized that that was a problem in English speaking countries and with English language papers and books.

As English in my world is not only for native English speakers it is also the international language in my main areas of interest: environmental education, education for sustainable development, science education, travel, especially travel to islands, photography, (stock photography, not least), nature, birding, and environmental concern.

Conclusion: I have had to skip my special letter ‘Ø’ and use an ‘O’ in stead. It would have been more logic to translate Ø into OE but that only makes it more diffucult.

So for many years I have tried to use my full name as Soren Breiting when I have activities in English language. To my knowledge I am the only person to date wearing that name, see

Happily I do not have more names than that, because more names might also give more confusion.

I have a very good colleague with the name Annemarie Møller Andersen (in fact her name is even longer). Anyway she have had some problems added to the use of the letter ø in her middle name. Because in Danish it would be common to call her family name for ‘Møller Andersen’ as Andersen is one of the most common Danish family names. But the fact is that her real family name is Andersen.

Can you image how this can give problems for a university scholar that produce scientific articles? Where to list the name in the reference list etc.

So I can just be very happy with my own simple and uncomplicated ‘international’ name Soren Breiting – because I early chose to skip the non-latin letter Ø and exchange it to the latin letter o.

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Issues for environmental education and ESD research development: looking ahead from WEEC 2007 in Durban

New paper about research issues related to the development of environmental education (EE) and education for sustainable development (ESD), espcielly relevant for the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD), here the abstract:

Issues for environmental education and ESD research development: looking ahead from WEEC 2007 in Durban

Abstract

Can we avoid inheriting serious issues from research related to environmental education when the researcher community is addressing education for sustainable development? This paper identifies and discusses three main issues: if an explicit and coherent concept of environmental education or education for sustainable development is missing; if the field is dominated by researchers with an environmental science background; and if the research is aiming at improving practice through prescriptive, normative recommendations. The elaboration of the issues is taking a point of departure in the World Environmental Education Congress 2007 in Durban with perspectives for future ESD research and traces the historical roots of some of the trends and issues. It is argued that the overall question is related to a basic dichotomy: is the researcher seeing the role as a support to solving environmental problems here and now, or is the researcher seeing long-term empowerment through education as the main idea.

Because of copyright issues I cannot bring the full paper – you have to find it in the scientific journal:

Environmental Education Research, Volume 15, Issue 2 April 2009 , pages 199 – 207

Author: Soren Breiting

Examples of sites refering to the paper “Issues for environmental education and ESD research development: looking ahead from WEEC 2007 in Durban

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Results from UNESCO World Conference on Education for Sustainable Development Bonn

Soren Breiting speaking at the UNESCO World Conference on ESD in Bonn, Germany, in a workshop on Climate Change Education.

The results from the UNESCO World Conference on Education for Sustainable Development in Bonn 31 March to 2 April 2009 is a mixture of outcome of networking among educators, high level politicians, NGOs, agencies and the media. Besides the personal contacts during the conference one of the important results of the conference is the Bonn Declaration.

You will find the Bonn Declaration for Education for Sustainable Development here.
Please help us to spread the message of this important document as a declaration only has an effect if people know about it and take action.
The Bonn Conference on ESD will also be documented in different ways and I will come back to information about that.

We are in the middle of the Decade for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) of UNESCO and it is imperative that we take action ourselves where we work and can be influential instead of just waiting for others to take action. Please make the best our of the Bonn  Declaration for ESD development.

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Stealing articles from other authors – an increasing scam

As an author and photographer with many websites I have used articles to be noticed at the web. I write articles for my websites with as good content I am able to and I write articles for free reprint. Without good content on your websites you can forget to have any success with them – no visitors will want to come back to a site where the content sucks.

The mechanisms with writing articles for free reprint and distribution is a rather different approach. The articles are written in a focussed way and you include a link or other contact information at the bottom in what is often called the authors resource box, see for example the article directory GratisArtikler.com .

When authors have submitted their article to such an article portal other webmasters can make use of the article as long as they are not changing anything in the article, including keeping all links and other contact information of the author.

Publishers of ezines are likewise able to publish such articles keeping the same conditions in mind.

These mechanisms are very fair – a win-win situation for all partners, but only as long as the user is keeping the articles as is.

You can see my articles at Ezinearticles.com – the biggest international article directory – here http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Soren_Breiting

But take a quick look on my article http://ezinearticles.com/?A-Personal-Loan-Can-Bring-You-a-Fortune-or-Failure&id=268463

And then compare it with an article at a blog:
http://gbguidestudentloan.blogspot.com/2009/04/personal-loan-can-bring-you-fortune-or.html

The publisher of this blog, called ‘meriam’ has stolen my article and not kept the links, but even worse she has used one of the so-called article spinners to make a unique text to have Google seeing the article as a unique article but violating my copyright of the whole thing. The decent article has been turned into something completely foolish – with my name included.

As typical for that kind of article scams she isn’t showing any contact details and I will just have to close my ayes for the scam and enjoy that the internet marketers aren’t only that kind of shameful persons, but also decent people that play a fair game.

PS
Of cause I was hesitating to spread the link to miriam’s blog as I am in this way helping her with traffic to her site.

- What to do, please leave a comment below.

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