Publication | Closed Access
Educators’ experiences and strategies for responding to ecological distress
72
Citations
40
References
2020
Year
Climate EthicsResilience (Structural Engineering)EngineeringMulticultural EducationEnvironmental PsychologyEducationSocial SciencesResilience (Community Psychology)Teacher EducationClimate ResilienceEcology (Indigenous Studies)Environmental BehaviorClimate ActionClimate GriefEcology (Ecological Sciences)Climate ChangeClimate SciencesEnvironmental KnowledgeClimate CommunicationEcological DistressClimate Change AnxietySustaining Education
Abstract Research is increasingly identifying the issues of ecological distress, eco-anxiety and climate grief. These painful experiences arise from heightened ecological knowledge and concern, which are commonly considered to be de facto aims of environmental education. Yet little research investigates the issues of climate change anxiety in educational spaces, nor how educators seek to respond to or prevent such emotional experiences. This study surveyed environmental educators in eastern Australia about their experiences and strategies for responding to their learners’ ecological distress. Educators reported that their students commonly experienced feeling overwhelmed, hopeless, anxious, angry, sad and frustrated when engaging with ecological crises. Educators’ strategies for responding to their learners’ needs included encouraging students to engage with their emotions, validating those emotions, supporting students to navigate and respond to those emotions and empowering them to take climate action. Educators felt that supporting their students to face and respond to ecological crises was an extremely challenging task, one which was hindered by time limitations, their own emotional distress, professional expectations, society-wide climate denial and a lack of guidance on what works.
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