An Issue of Scale: The Challenge of Time, Space and Multitude in Sustainability and Geography Education

Frode Skarstein, Lili-Ann Wolff

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

The field of geography is important for any sustainability education. The aim of geography education is to enable students to understand the environment, its influence on human activity, and how humans influence the environment. In this article we present a study on how the interplay between the three pillars of sustainability thinking (environment, society and economy) play out on smaller and larger scales of time, space and multitude in geography education. In this paper, we argue that central issues in high quality sustainability education in geography relates to students’ deeper grasp of how to shift between magnitudes of time, space and multitude patterns. We show how an appreciation of many core issues in sustainability education require students to understand and traverse different magnitudes of the scalable concepts of time, space and multitude. Furthermore, we argue and exemplify how common sustainability misconceptions arise due to an inability to make the cognitive shift between relevant magnitudes on these scalable concepts. Finally, we briefly discuss useful educational approaches to mediating this problem, including the use of digital tools in order to allow geography teachers to facilitate the students’ better understanding of different magnitudes of slow, fast, small and large scale entities and processes.
Original languageEnglish
Article number28
JournalEducation Sciences
Volume10
Issue number2
Number of pages18
ISSN2227-7102
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jan 2020
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Bibliographical note

Article is also published in: Geography Education Promoting Sustainability.
ISBN 978-3-03928-500-6 (Pbk); ISBN 978-3-03928-501-3 (PDF)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/books978-3-03928-501-3
https://www.mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/2184

Fields of Science

  • 1171 Geosciences
  • 516 Educational sciences
  • geography education
  • sustainability education
  • education for sustainable development (ESD)
  • misconceptions
  • preconceptions
  • alternative conceptions
  • magnitude
  • issues of scale
  • mental models
  • digital tools
  • dialogic teaching
  • BASE-LINE SYNDROME
  • CLIMATE-CHANGE
  • PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS
  • TEACHERS CONCEPTS
  • MISCONCEPTIONS
  • STUDENTS
  • ANTHROPOCENE
  • CONSEQUENCES
  • DETERMINANTS
  • COMPETENCES

Cite this