Learning to spend time in unusual times: An inquiry into the potential for sustainability learning during COVID-19-induced school closures

IF 2.3 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION Pub Date : 2023-12-15 DOI:10.1007/s11159-023-10034-w
Claire Grauer, Pascal Frank, Daniel Fischer
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Abstract

While current research on school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic is predominantly concerned with learning deficits, the exploratory study presented here focuses on the previously neglected question of young people’s concrete learning experiences during this disruptive period, with a focus on how they used their time and how this relates to their individual needs. The authors interviewed German secondary school students via Zoom and used a grounded theory approach and a transformative learning theory framework to derive recommendations for environmental and sustainability education (ESE). Their findings highlight two important insights: first, that the predominant focus on academic learning loss obscures a more comprehensive understanding of students’ learning experiences; and second, that real-world experiments such as the involuntary school closures during the pandemic may hold the potential to start meaningful, transformative learning processes and experimentation with new strategies for needs satisfaction.

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学会在非常时期度过时间:探究在 COVID-19 引发的学校停课期间开展可持续性学习的潜力
目前有关 COVID-19 大流行期间学校停课的研究主要关注的是学习障碍,而本文介绍的探索性研究则侧重于以前被忽视的问题,即青少年在这一混乱时期的具体学习经历,重点关注他们如何利用时间以及这与他们的个人需求之间的关系。作者通过 Zoom 对德国中学生进行了访谈,并采用基础理论方法和变革学习理论框架,为环境与可持续发展教育(ESE)提出了建议。他们的研究结果突出了两个重要见解:第一,对学术学习损失的主要关注掩盖了对学生学习经历的更全面了解;第二,诸如大流行病期间学校非自愿关闭等现实世界的实验可能会开启有意义的变革性学习过程,并尝试满足需求的新策略。
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来源期刊
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
6.20%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: The International Review of Education – Journal of Lifelong Learning (IRE) is edited by the UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning, a global centre of excellence for lifelong learning and learning societies. Founded in 1955, IRE is the world’s longest-running peer-reviewed journal of comparative education, serving not only academic and research communities but, equally, high-level policy and practice readerships throughout the world. Today, IRE provides a forum for theoretically-informed and policy-relevant applied research in lifelong and life-wide learning in international and comparative contexts. Preferred topic areas include adult education, non-formal education, adult literacy, open and distance learning, vocational education and workplace learning, new access routes to formal education, lifelong learning policies, and various applications of the lifelong learning paradigm.Consistent with the mandate of UNESCO, the IRE fosters scholarly exchange on lifelong learning from all regions of the world, particularly developing and transition countries. In addition to inviting submissions from authors for its general issues, the IRE also publishes regular guest-edited special issues on key and emerging topics in lifelong learning.
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