ABSTRACT

This edited volume draws together educators and scholars to engage with the difficulties and benefits of teaching place-based education in a distinctive culture-laden area in North America: the United States South. Despite problematic past visions of cultural homogeneity, the South has always been a culturally diverse region with many historical layers of inhabitation and migration, each with their own set of religious and secular relationships to the land. Through site-specific narratives, this volume offers a blueprint for new approaches to place-based pedagogy, with an emphasis on the intersection between religion and the environment. By offering broadly applicable examples of pedagogical methods and practices, this book confronts the need to develop more sustainable local communities to address globally significant challenges.

part I|68 pages

Place, Theology, Practice

chapter 3|11 pages

Field Trip: The Star on the Mountain

Using Hands-On Experience of Native American Stories and Technologies to Teach Children about Place, Culture, and Self

chapter 4|19 pages

Memories of Home

Theological Education, Place-Based Pedagogy, and Inhabitance

part II|56 pages

Engaging with Community Through Place

chapter 6|19 pages

Placing Pedagogy and Sustainability in the Piedmont

Faculty and Student Engagement

chapter 7|11 pages

Field Trip: Making Incarceration Visible

An Adventure in Shared Authority

chapter 8|17 pages

Why Do We Live Where We Do?

Teaching Native American Settlement Ecology in the North Carolina Piedmont

part III|30 pages

Wounded Places, Healing Places

chapter 10|12 pages

Toward a New Kind of Piety

City Creeks, Place-Making, and Lapsed Environmental Discourse on Florida’s Gulf Coast

chapter 11|3 pages

Field Trip: Navigating Troubled Waters

Florida’s Talbot Islands and the Kingsley Plantation

part IV|35 pages

Assessing, Concluding, Moving Forward

chapter 13|10 pages

Field Trip: Intersections of Would, Can, and Will

What to Do When White Supremacists Come to Town

chapter 14|14 pages

Pathway for Place-Based Pedagogies

A Pliable Taxonomy for Course Design and Assessment

chapter 15|5 pages

Field Trip: From Local Places to Global Networks

Front Porch Conversation at the Green River Preserve in Kentucky, May 2015

chapter 16|4 pages

Conclusion

Principles for Teaching about Place in the South