We describe an immersive investigation of children\u27s contemporary picture books, which examines concepts of environment and place. The authors\u27 experience occurred through and alongside a community of learners, of preservice teachers and young children, in an urban coastal community, as part of an undergraduate, pre-service teacher education unit. Participants were led through the experience utilizing techniques informed by immersive art pedagogy, to foreground the in-between dispositions of their roles as artists, researchers, and teachers (A/r/tography), and their emerging roles as environmentalists (A/r/t-e-ography). Our investigation of the relationship between picture books and inquiry into their embodied experiences with the boo...
Cutter-Mackenzie et al* claim that children’s literature provides “some of the first and possibly mo...
In this book we go to five Australian classrooms, bustling with nine- and ten-year-old children. In ...
This study is a reaction to the paucity of research on children's aesthetic encounters in living env...
Recent scholarship on children\u27s literature displays a wide variety of interests in classic and c...
This not quite \u27final\u27 ending of this special issue of Environmental Education Research traces...
Introduction: Increasingly, children are becoming alienated and detached from their natural world. P...
© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. It is well established that en...
Creative Common worlding with research-creation in early childhood education engages with provocatio...
It is said that children today are becoming increasingly disconnected from their environment. Howeve...
It is said that children today are becoming increasingly disconnected from their environment. Howeve...
This portfolio seeks to trouble and unsettle the pervasiveness of settler colonialism, White suprem...
In this chapter, we explore some of the work of an arts and well-being charity in the UK called Camb...
Fiction offers creative and imaginative scenarios and solutions that may stimulate young people to c...
Fiction offers creative and imaginative scenarios and solutions that may stimulate young people to c...
In light of the much discussed ‘disconnect’ from nature, educational moves towards a ‘connect’ with ...
Cutter-Mackenzie et al* claim that children’s literature provides “some of the first and possibly mo...
In this book we go to five Australian classrooms, bustling with nine- and ten-year-old children. In ...
This study is a reaction to the paucity of research on children's aesthetic encounters in living env...
Recent scholarship on children\u27s literature displays a wide variety of interests in classic and c...
This not quite \u27final\u27 ending of this special issue of Environmental Education Research traces...
Introduction: Increasingly, children are becoming alienated and detached from their natural world. P...
© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. It is well established that en...
Creative Common worlding with research-creation in early childhood education engages with provocatio...
It is said that children today are becoming increasingly disconnected from their environment. Howeve...
It is said that children today are becoming increasingly disconnected from their environment. Howeve...
This portfolio seeks to trouble and unsettle the pervasiveness of settler colonialism, White suprem...
In this chapter, we explore some of the work of an arts and well-being charity in the UK called Camb...
Fiction offers creative and imaginative scenarios and solutions that may stimulate young people to c...
Fiction offers creative and imaginative scenarios and solutions that may stimulate young people to c...
In light of the much discussed ‘disconnect’ from nature, educational moves towards a ‘connect’ with ...
Cutter-Mackenzie et al* claim that children’s literature provides “some of the first and possibly mo...
In this book we go to five Australian classrooms, bustling with nine- and ten-year-old children. In ...
This study is a reaction to the paucity of research on children's aesthetic encounters in living env...