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Art Education for a Sustainable Planet

Embracing Ecopedagogy in K–12 Classrooms

Joy G. Bertling

Foreword by: Olivia Gude

Publication Date: June 23, 2023

Pages: 208

Available Formats
HARDCOVER
ISBN: 9780807767719
$117.00
PAPERBACK
ISBN: 9780807767702
$38.95
EBOOK
ISBN: 9780807781401
$38.95
Art Education for a Sustainable Planet 9780807767719
  • Description
  • Author
  • Reviews
  • Contents
  • Awards

Description+

2024 National Art Education Association (NAEA) Ecology and Environment Interest Group (EEIG) Outstanding Publication Award

Explore how art education can contribute to a more just and sustainable planet. Making the case that ecopedagogy and eco-art can transform and enrich art education, Bertling introduces these two burgeoning movements and then outlines how they can be infused into K–12 art education. Seven innovative curricular strands are presented to help art teachers embrace natural cycles and processes, envision alternative states and ways of being, restore ecosystems, and empower communities. These strands weave together specific contemporary eco-artworks, cultural and environmental philosophies, and art education methods. Reflective questions, innovative curriculum frameworks, and other resources are provided to support teachers in enacting these inspiring curricular ideas for better social and ecological futures. Curricular themes include attentiveness, relationality, co-creation, consumption, progress, cultural desire, identity stories, restoration, and coalitions. This accessible, full-color text is the first of its kind to provide practical guidance and concrete strategies for educators interested in enacting ecological art instruction.

Book Features:

  • A foundational resource for using art education to foster environmental health and ecological integrity.
  • Guidance for developing art curriculum to meet different ecopedagogical goals.
  • Many color images of contemporary eco-artworks.
  • Curriculum framework tables and reflective questions at the end of each chapter.
  • A comprehensive glossary and list of contemporary eco-artists and their websites.

Author+

Joy G. Bertling is an assistant professor and team leader of art education at the University of Tennessee. She currently serves as founding chair of the National Art Education Association’s Ecology and Environment Special Interest Group and chair of the American Educational Research Association’s Arts and Learning Special Interest Group.

Reviews+

“The heart of the book dissects our dependence as a species on countless elements of our habitat through examining a series of discrete themes in recent art that can be dynamically explored in educational settings…neither urgency nor creativity is lacking in this excellent volume, and I have every intention of using it in my own teaching.”

—International Journal of Education Through Art

“Art Education for a Sustainable Planet presents a vision of a new sort of art education. It is grounded in the realities of contemporary art and culture, contemporary science, contemporary social life, and traditional knowledges from diverse cultures, as well as in the climate realities facing youth and communities.”
—From the Foreword by Olivia Gude, Angela Gregory Paterakis Professor of Art Education, School of the Art Institute of Chicago

“Joy Bertling has written an engaging and thought-provoking book touching on themes of social transformation, art education, and ecology. Merging art, education, curriculum, and pedagogy, she has created a definitive approach to art education that engages with our fracturing relationships with the natural world. Designed for art educators, the book emphasizes sustainability, eco-art, place-based education, and issues surrounding environment and ecology. Her work is visionary in its focus on the transformation of social, cultural, economic, and political structures. These ambitious goals are translated into strategies and methods for educators that can serve the practical purposes of a critical pedagogy. The book brings together the author’s outstanding contributions to the scholarship of data visualization and ecology in art education. Many examples of contemporary artists work with environmental issues provide aesthetic and artistic insights into socially active responses. Each section includes essential questions for students and educators. What makes this volume particularly distinctive is its comprehensive, well-researched connection to current educational and artistic discourse about ecological issues and its practical support of educators in providing socially engaged and hopeful strategies for understanding and engaging with these critical issues.”
—Mark A. Graham, professor, Brigham Young University

“Dr. Bertling's book is a flare, a spotlight, a microscope, and a mirror. In this environmental crisis, she generously offers us not another pedagogy of lament but rather a means by which we can reflect, articulate, become more aware, act, and teach each other. This book will aid teachers and their students to move beyond sustainability as a mere subject of study, and into a fuller understanding that ecopedagogy is, more than anything, a relational posture where we take care of the earth, knowing full well that all this time it has been taking care of us. Teachers, read this book with other teachers!”
—Jorge Lucero, associate professor, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Contents+

Contents

Foreword Olivia Gude  ix

Acknowledgments  xiii

Introduction  1

Part I: Foundations for Art Education as Ecopedagogy  7

1.  Ecopedagogy  9
Educational Traditions  10
Cultural and Philosophical Influences  14
Conclusion  19
Questions for Educator Reflection  20

2.  Ecological Art  21
Eco-Art in Recent History  21
Issues Surrounding Eco-Art  24
Conclusion  28
Questions for Educator Reflection  28

3.  Contemporary Art Education  29
Current Art Education Movements  30
Ecopedagogy as Art Education  35
Questions for Educator Reflection  35

Part II. Contemporary Art and Ecopedagogical Curriculum and Methods  37

4.  Cultivating Relations and Fostering Empathetic Encounters  41
Being Present  42
Emphasizing Relationality  46
Conclusion  52
Questions for Educator Reflection  52

5.  Embracing Natural Cycles and Processes  53
Redefining Beauty  54
Co-Creating With Agents of Decomposition  61
Culturally Acknowledging Mortality  64
Conclusion  70
Questions for Educator Reflection  70

6.  Collecting and Visualizing Data for Awareness  72
Visualizing the Present  73
Visualizing Our Future  79
Conclusion  85
Questions for Educator Reflection  85

7.  Confronting Capitalocene Violence  86
Exposing Cultural Dreams and Desires  87
Rewriting Identity Stories  92
Demanding Accountability  96
Conclusion  99
Questions for Educator Reflection  99

8.  Envisioning Alternate States and Ways of Being  100
With Jonathan Purtill
Envisioning the Future of Human and Nonhuman Nature Relations  101
Envisaging the Posthuman  108
Conclusion  113
Questions for Educator Reflection  113

9.  Greening the School and Revitalizing School Culture  114
With Lauren Farkas
Placemaking in Indoor Spaces  117
Placemaking in Outdoor Spaces  120
Conclusion  125
Questions for Educator Reflection  126

10.  Restoring Ecosystems and Empowering Communities  127
Restoring Species and Ecosystem Processes  128
Establishing Coalitions and Multispecies Assemblages  133
Conclusion  138
Questions for Educator Reflection  139

Conclusion  140

Appendix A. Artists and Their Websites  145

Appendix B. Inclusion of Nature in Self Scale  149

Appendix C. Environmental Identity Scale  150

Glossary of Terms  151

References  155

Author Index  182

Subject Index  188

About the Author and Contributors  194

Awards+

2024 National Art Education Association (NAEA) Ecology and Environment Interest Group (EEIG) Outstanding Publication Award

$117.00

Professors: Request an Exam Copy

Print copies available for US orders only. For orders outside the US, see our international distributors.

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