Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning

Social change requires new educational planning and sustainable teaching methods. Shaping an environment of care with animals as a part of the daily school life may produce such a change. In this article, we present a transdisciplinary study with the aim of exploring whether raising chickens in a cl...

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Main Authors: Lili-Ann Wolff, Sari Vuorenpää, Pia Sjöblom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/11/3886
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spelling doaj-4a4e36a73eb94c0294e75cb38ad255782020-11-25T00:49:45ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-10-011011388610.3390/su10113886su10113886Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability LearningLili-Ann Wolff0Sari Vuorenpää1Pia Sjöblom2Faculty of Education, University of Helsinki, FI 00041 Helsinki, FinlandDepartment of Language Education, Stockholm University, SE 10691 Stockholm, SwedenFaculty of Education and Welfare Studies, Åbo Akademi University, FI 65100 Vaasa, FinlandSocial change requires new educational planning and sustainable teaching methods. Shaping an environment of care with animals as a part of the daily school life may produce such a change. In this article, we present a transdisciplinary study with the aim of exploring whether raising chickens in a classroom could promote learning, especially sustainability learning, and how. The study employs an ethnographic approach and we have analyzed the data according to interaction analysis. We collected the data in a culturally-diverse Finnish primary school class during May 2018. The data comprise field notes, videos and photographs from indoor and outdoor school activities; interviews and discussions with teachers and students; and, texts and artifacts that were made by students. The results show that having chickens in the classroom not only improved the students’ learning of biology, but also enhanced many other activities. The chicken project became part of a complex learning culture that met several of the aims of the curriculum and in many ways reached beyond the aim of merely learning science. The project became a natural part of sustainability education and promoted the acquisition of knowledge and skills in relation to the ecological and social dimensions of sustainability.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/11/3886cultural diversityclassroom animalsecology learningethnographyinteraction analysismultilingualscience educationsocial sustainabilitysocial sustainability educationsustainability education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lili-Ann Wolff
Sari Vuorenpää
Pia Sjöblom
spellingShingle Lili-Ann Wolff
Sari Vuorenpää
Pia Sjöblom
Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
Sustainability
cultural diversity
classroom animals
ecology learning
ethnography
interaction analysis
multilingual
science education
social sustainability
social sustainability education
sustainability education
author_facet Lili-Ann Wolff
Sari Vuorenpää
Pia Sjöblom
author_sort Lili-Ann Wolff
title Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
title_short Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
title_full Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
title_fullStr Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
title_full_unstemmed Chicken Raising in a Diverse Finnish Classroom: Multidimensional Sustainability Learning
title_sort chicken raising in a diverse finnish classroom: multidimensional sustainability learning
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Social change requires new educational planning and sustainable teaching methods. Shaping an environment of care with animals as a part of the daily school life may produce such a change. In this article, we present a transdisciplinary study with the aim of exploring whether raising chickens in a classroom could promote learning, especially sustainability learning, and how. The study employs an ethnographic approach and we have analyzed the data according to interaction analysis. We collected the data in a culturally-diverse Finnish primary school class during May 2018. The data comprise field notes, videos and photographs from indoor and outdoor school activities; interviews and discussions with teachers and students; and, texts and artifacts that were made by students. The results show that having chickens in the classroom not only improved the students’ learning of biology, but also enhanced many other activities. The chicken project became part of a complex learning culture that met several of the aims of the curriculum and in many ways reached beyond the aim of merely learning science. The project became a natural part of sustainability education and promoted the acquisition of knowledge and skills in relation to the ecological and social dimensions of sustainability.
topic cultural diversity
classroom animals
ecology learning
ethnography
interaction analysis
multilingual
science education
social sustainability
social sustainability education
sustainability education
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/11/3886
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