Teachers’ Transgressive Pedagogical Practices in Context: Ecology, Politics and Social Change.

Condesa-Marmentini, Antonia; Flores-Gonzalez, Luis

Keywords: chile, social change, teachers, environmental and sustainability education, transgressive learning

Abstract

Chilean teachers face the urgent challenge of incorporating environmental and sustainability dimensions into their teaching practices within an economic and social context of extreme neoliberalism, which has an important impact on both teaching practices and hegemonic perspectives on the environment. Therefore, this article explores the motivations that guide the environment-related practices of teachers at Chilean secondary schools. Using a framework of pragmatism and phenomenology, it addresses teachers’ meaning-making through the interpretative axes of their views on the environment and theories of education, addressing the following categories: (1) connection and consciousness; (2) participation and politics; and (3) re-thinking education. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding “environmental issues” in context, together with the transversal axis of social change. Teachers’ meaning-making arises from their social and historical context and can be interpreted from the standpoint of traditions of thought originating in Latin America. The article argues that the transgressive element in the studied practices is social change, understood as community action arising from a combination of critical reflection and with an emphasis on the co-production of knowledge in this collective sphere. This is experienced by the teachers as a challenge to their capacity to address the inherent uncertainty of knowledge and the projection of a utopian society as a social right.

Más información

Título de la Revista: SUSTAINABILITY
Volumen: 11(21)
Editorial: MDPI
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 18
Idioma: Inglés
Financiamiento/Sponsor: BECAS-CONICYT
DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3390/su11216145

Notas: ISI