ABSTRACT

Environmental education is a field characterised by a paradox. Few would doubt the urgency and importance of learning to live in sustainable ways, but environmental education holds nowhere near the priority position in formal schooling around the world that this would suggest. This text sets out to find out why this is so. It is divided into six parts:
Part 1 is a concise history of the development of environmental education from an international perspective;
Part 2 is an overview of the 'global agenda', or subject knowledge of environmental education;
Part 3 introduces perspectives on theory and research in environmental education;
Part 4 moves on to practice, and presents an integrated model for planning environmental education programmes;
Part 5 brings together invited contributors who talk about environmental education in their own countries - from 15 countries including China, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the USA;
Part 6 returns to the core questions of how progress can be made, and how we can maximise the potential of environmental education for the twenty first century.

part |31 pages

Part I

part |48 pages

Part II

chapter |46 pages

The Global Agenda

part |63 pages

Part V

chapter |1 pages

The Global Scene

chapter |3 pages

Australia

chapter |4 pages

Canada

chapter |6 pages

Ecuador

chapter |2 pages

Greece

chapter |4 pages

Hong Kong

chapter |3 pages

Latvia

chapter |4 pages

Romania

chapter |4 pages

Slovenia

chapter |3 pages

South Africa

chapter |4 pages

Sri Lanka

chapter |2 pages

Taiwan

chapter |6 pages

Uganda