Teachers’ Perceptions on Environmental Citizenship: A Systematic Review of the Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How do teachers conceive environmental citizenship?
- What are the main characteristics of teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship?
- What is the impact of teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship on their professional identity?
- How can teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship be enhanced?
2. Education for Environmental Citizenship
“Education for Environmental Citizenship’ is defined as the type of education that cultivates a coherent and adequate body of knowledge as well as the necessary skills, values, attitudes and competences that an Environmental Citizen should be equipped with in order to be able to act and participate in society as an agent of change in the private and public sphere on a local, national and global scale, through individual and collective actions in the direction of solving contemporary environmental problems, preventing the creation of new environmental problems, in achieving sustainability as well as developing a healthy relationship with nature. Education for Environmental Citizenship is important to empower citizens to practice their environmental rights and duties, as well as to identify the underlying structural causes of environmental degradation and environmental problems, develop the willingness and the competences for critical and active engagement and civic participation to address those structural causes and act individually and collectively within democratic means, taking into account the inter- and intra-generational justice”.
3. Methods
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. Data Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Conceptualization
4.1.1. Teachers’ Perceptions Manifest a Relatively Decreased Understanding of Environmental Citizenship
4.1.2. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship Are Narrowed Down to the Local Scale, Individual Dimension and Private Sphere
4.2. Characteristics
4.2.1. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship as a Multi-Dimensional Construct, Defined by Inter-Related Components
4.2.2. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship Are Differentiated According to Their Educational/Cultural Backgrounds and Personal Identity
4.3. Impact
4.3.1. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship Affect Their Teaching Practices
4.3.2. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship Affect Other Environmental Constructs Which Define Their Professional Identity
4.4. Enhancement
4.4.1. Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship Can Be Enhanced during Teacher Education
4.4.2. Teachers’ Perceptions Can Be Enhanced during Professional Development Initiatives
5. Discussion
5.1. Teachers’ Conceptualization of Environmental Citizenship
5.2. Characteristics of Teachers’ Perceptions of Environmental Citizenship
5.3. Impact of Teachers’ Environmental Citizenship Perceptions on Their Professional Identity
5.4. Enhancement of Teachers’ Environmental Citizenship Perceptions
6. Limitations
7. Educational Implications and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Categories | Definition | |
---|---|---|
1 | Conceptualization | This category refers to the way teachers perceive both environmental citizenship as well as the potential actions which an environmental citizen may undertake in terms of dimensions (individual and collective), spheres (private and public spheres) and impact at different scales (local, national or global). |
2 | Characteristics | This category refers to the characteristics of the environmental citizenship perceptions, focusing on their main components as well as on their subjective nature. |
3 | Impact | This category refers to the impact of teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship on teaching practices as well as on teachers’ professional identity. |
4 | Enhancement | This category refers to the enhancement of teachers’ perceptions in the context of teacher education or professional development programs. |
# | Author(s)/Year | Country | Research Goals | Research Design | Sample | Data Collection | Major Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Aarnio-Linnanvuori, 2019 | Finland | To investigate teachers’ perceptions of environmental responsibility with a focus on environmental citizenship. | Qualitative case study | 13 in-service teachers in secondary education |
| Almost all the in-service teachers mentioned environmental citizenship as an integral part of environmental responsibility. However, teachers conceptualized environmental citizenship on the basis of individualization rather than on the basis of collectiveness. In addition, while the participating teachers were well aware of various environmental citizenship actions, they perceived their students’ range of action possibilities as particularly narrow. |
2 | Abd-El-Aal & Steele, 2013 | Egypt | To evaluate the impact of an Environmental Education course, tasking pre-service teachers to investigate and take action with respect to an environmental issue (in the context of a community-based project), on teachers’ perceptions and practices of environmental citizenship. | Qualitative case study | 38 pre-service teachers |
| The community-based projects enacted during the environmental course enhanced teachers’ conceptions of environmental citizenship. During their fieldwork, and as acts of environmental citizenship, the teachers strove to find solutions for the environmental problems they encountered in their communities. |
3 | Avriel-Avni & Gan, 2019 | Israel | To enhance pre-service teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship by using the field mapping approach. | Action research | 24 in-service teachers |
| The use of field maps helped the pre-service teachers to better understand the complexity of a social–ecological system as well as to realize their role, as active citizens within it, thus promoting their understanding of environmental citizenship. |
4 | Bradberry, 2013 | Australia | To explore ways in which some examples of children’s literature can be used to assist pre-service teachers to develop children’s environmental citizenship and understandings of an ecologically sustainable future. | Qualitative case study | 5 tutors (and 140 pre-service teachers) |
| Many pre-service teachers do not have the pedagogical content knowledge and skills to promote young students’ citizenship in order to achieve environmental sustainability. Children’s literature on ecological issues can be utilized in producing future teachers able to transform their students into actively participatory human beings, via fostering their environmental literacy and environmental citizenship. |
5 | Bulut, 2019 | Turkey | To investigate the relationship of environmental citizenship with the sustainable development awareness levels of pre-service teachers. | Relational research methods | 387 pre-service teachers attending social studies |
| The sustainable development awareness and environmental citizenship levels of females were higher when compared to male pre-service teachers. Both environmental citizenship and sustainable development awareness levels of the pre-service teachers increased as the grade of the pre-service teachers increased from the freshmen to the senior level. Finally, there was a positive correlation between environmental citizenship and sustainable development awareness levels of the participants. |
6 | Campbell & Davies, 1995 | UK | To explore the meaning of environmental citizenship education for pre-service teachers. | Quantitative research methods | 93 pre-service teachers, training to become secondary school teachers |
| Environmental citizenship is inadequately conceptualized by the pre-service teachers. A few pre-service teachers gave responses that were categorized as clearly providing the definition and/or aims of environmental citizenship. While the pre-service teachers expressed the need for taking action, they over-emphasized the importance of direct personal action for the environment (largely recycling), neglecting other forms and types of environmental citizenship actions. |
7 | Chaya & Ali, 2016 | Lebanon | To evaluate the impact of an Environmental Education course, which included project-based learning, on teachers’ environmental citizenship. | Mixed methods | 222 pre-service teachers (162 undergraduate students and 60 postgraduate students) |
| Before the course, the pre-service teachers had low to average knowledge, practice and attitudes towards environmental citizenship. They showed devalued commitment towards environmental citizenship, which was revealed by the ignorance of their responsibility towards the environment. After the course, the teachers’ knowledge, practice and attitudes towards environmental citizenship were significantly increased. |
8 | Gal & Gan, 2020 | Israel | To evaluate the impact of an Environmental Education course, which aimed at fostering pre-service teachers’ environmental understanding and environmental citizenship. | Qualitative case study | 20 pre-service teachers |
| Prior to the course, the pre-service teachers did not display a deep understanding of social–ecological systems or pro-environmental actions. The course increased teachers’ understanding of social–ecological systems and encouraged most of them to act as agents of change. |
9 | Gooch et al., 2008 | Australia | To analyze environmentally focused integrated unit plans, developed and implemented by pre-service teachers, to determine the extent to which they contained concepts that promoted environmental citizenship. | Content analysis methods | 46 pre-service teachers trained to become teachers in primary education |
| The analyzed lesson plans, in many cases, were lacking any action-oriented knowledge. These findings suggest that pre-service teachers need support for teaching, learning and acting responsibly in relation to complex environmental issues. The teachers should receive guidance in order to be able to empower their students as well as to promote their environmental citizenship. |
10 | Green et al., 2016 | US | To explore how participating in a political environmental action project influenced teachers’ environmental citizenship. | Qualitative case study | 7 pre-service teachers (undergraduate students) |
| At the end of the project, there was a growth in the pre-service teachers’ environmental citizenship, including their self-efficacy, values, awareness and ecological and civics literacy. The pre-service teachers recognized energy conservation as a socioenvironmental issue, with local and global implications, and indicated their professional commitment toward action-oriented Environmental Education. |
11 | Karatekin, 2019 | Turkey | To identify the level of environmental citizenship of teachers as well as to investigate the relationship between the dimensions of environmental citizenship and the mediating role of curiosity about the environment and the frequency of participation in environmental activities. | Relational research method | 296 in-service teachers at secondary education |
| The teachers’ environmental citizenship levels were moderate to low in the dimension of civic participation, moderate in the dimensions of responsibility and sustainability and high in the dimension of rights and justice. Teachers’ curiosity towards the environment as well as the frequency of participation in environmental activities positively predicted their environmental citizenship. |
12 | Lummis et al., 2016 | Australia | To examine the influence of environmental citizenship and political solidarity on teachers’ perceptions of sustainability. | Qualitative case study | 18 pre-service teachers |
| The findings revealed that the pre-service teachers’ perceptions of sustainability were influenced by environmental citizenship and political solidarity concepts. However, none of the teachers used these latter terms explicitly during their interviews. The teachers also mixed up some of their ideas within both environmental citizenship and political solidarity. |
13 | Olsen et al., 2020 | US | To evaluate the impact of a Professional Development (PD) workshop on teachers’ perceptions of environmental citizenship. | Quasi-experimental design | 94 in-service teachers in both primary and secondary education |
| The PD workshop elicited a statistically significant improvement in teachers’ perceptions overall as well as regarding all five components defining environmental citizenship: Ecological Literacy, Civics Literacy, Practical Wisdom, Values, and Self-Efficacy. |
14 | Paige & Cogan. 2002 | US & China | To compare the perspectives of Guangdong, Hong Kong and Minnesota in-service teachers on key citizen characteristics and environmental concerns in the context of a Citizenship Education Project. | Quantitative research methods | 405 in-service teachers |
| The results showed that there were areas of agreement as well as disagreement between the three populations, with teachers in Guangdong and Minnesota being the furthest apart on citizen characteristics and the closest together on environmental concerns. |
15 | Spektor-Levy & Abramovich, 2020 | Israel | To evaluate the impact of a Professional Development (PD) program on teachers’ environmental awareness, environmental citizenship and leadership. | Quasi-experimental design | 46 in-service teachers in pre-school education |
| At the end of the PD program, there was an increase in teachers’ environmental awareness, with the teachers exhibiting profound understanding, high values and a deep willingness to act. The teachers reported experiences of empowerment—both on a personal level, and as educators and leaders. |
16 | Ünal, 2019 | Turkey | To investigate the environmental citizenship of pre-service teachers in terms of different variables and to determine the variables influencing the environmental citizenship level. | Quantitative research methods | 318 pre-service teachers |
| The environmental citizenship levels of the pre-service teachers did not differ significantly in relation to their gender, mother’s educational attainment level, father’s educational attainment level, membership in non-governmental organizations and membership in pre-service teachers’ organizations. Significant differences were found due to the impact of pre-service teachers’ educational disciplines (departments) and participation in social projects. |
Categories | Themes of Teachers’ Perceptions | Frequency | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Conceptualization | 1a | … manifest a relatively decreased understanding of environmental citizenship | 10 |
1b | … are narrowed down to the local scale, individual dimension and private sphere | 4 | ||
2 | Characteristics | 2a | … are multi-dimensional; are defined by several inter-related components | 3 |
2b | … vary according to teachers’ educational/cultural background and personal identity | 5 | ||
3 | Impact | 3a | … affect teaching practices | 4 |
3b | … affect other environmental constructs which define teachers’ professional identity | 2 | ||
4 | Enhancement | 4a | … can be enhanced during teacher education | 5 |
4b | … can be further improved during professional development initiatives | 3 |
# | Author(s)/Year | Training Approach | Target Group & Context of Implementation | Duration | Indicative Activities | Focus on EEC (Outputs, Dimensions, Spheres, Scales) |
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1 | Abd-El-Aal & Steele, 2013 | Community-based learning: According to this approach, the pre-service teachers were asked to investigate and take action on environmental issues in their communities. This approach allowed them to take leadership roles in local environmental issues, rather than simply focusing on general knowledge about the environment. | 38 pre-service teachers (Teacher education: Environmental Education course) | A semester-long course (the exact duration is not specified) |
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2 | Avriel-Avni & Gan, 2019 | Conceptual mapping: According to this approach, in-service teachers created three concept maps throughout the course, to map their field of action. Through mapping, the in-service teachers identified their role as environmental citizens within the socioenvironmental system and identified possible ways to influence it. | 24 in-service teachers (Teacher education: Environmental Education Master’s course) | Two-semester-long course (the exact duration is not specified) |
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3 | Bradberry, 2013 | Children’s literature: Children’s literature with strong ecological themes was selected, analyzed and thoroughly discussed with pre-service teachers as part of this approach. The aim of this approach was to support pre-service teachers in developing children’s environmental citizenship for achieving an ecologically sustainable future. | 140 pre-service teachers (Teacher education: Environmental Education course) | A semester-long course of 12 weeks (the exact duration is not specified) |
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4 | Chaya & Ali, 2016 | Project-based learning (PBL): PBL required teachers to investigate environmental problems in their communities. It provided opportunities to actively explore and address environmental challenges while developing skills in communication and teamwork, research, data collection and analysis, community engagement and reflection. | 222 pre-service teachers (Teacher education: Environmental Education course) | One semester (the exact duration is not specified) |
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5 | Gal & Gan, 2020 | Transformative Sustainability Education (TSE): TSE served as an effective approach in creating behavioral transformation related to environmental problems. In this study, TSE was employed in context of three field trips; each field trip provided to the teachers insights regarding the complexity of the social–ecological systems in Israel and introduced major environmental issues at local, regional and international levels. | 20 pre-service teachers (Teacher education: Environmental Education course) | One semester (the exact duration is not specified) |
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6 | Green et al., 2016 | Project citizen: A critical place-based action-oriented approach for the integration of environmental citizenship in teacher education. It allowed teachers to address social, cultural, economical and political complexities in their local communities, while also empowering them to explore how their personal experiences and background shape their engagement in democratic processes. | 7 pre-service teachers (undergraduate students) (Teacher education: Environmental Education course) | One semester (the exact duration is not specified) |
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7 | Olsen et al., 2020 | Adventure Learning (AL) approach: A hybrid approach which combined an online collaborative learning environment with adventure-based authentic learning experiences for the exploration of real-world issues connected to particular places. This approach was addressed to both local (face-to-face) and distance (online) participants (teachers) and was grounded in experiential and inquiry-based learning theory. | 94 in-service teachers in both primary and secondary education (Professional Development program) |
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8 | Spektor-Levy & Abramovich, 2020 | Environmental Leadership Professional Development (ELPD): This approach was structured around the teachers’ effort to plan an innovative venture related to environmental and sustainability issues and combined five main characteristics, as follows:
| 46 in-service teachers at pre-school education (Professional Development program) | 120 h: 15 face-to-face sessions lasting eight hours each |
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Georgiou, Y.; Hadjichambis, A.C.; Hadjichambi, D. Teachers’ Perceptions on Environmental Citizenship: A Systematic Review of the Literature. Sustainability 2021, 13, 2622. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052622
Georgiou Y, Hadjichambis AC, Hadjichambi D. Teachers’ Perceptions on Environmental Citizenship: A Systematic Review of the Literature. Sustainability. 2021; 13(5):2622. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052622
Chicago/Turabian StyleGeorgiou, Yiannis, Andreas Ch. Hadjichambis, and Demetra Hadjichambi. 2021. "Teachers’ Perceptions on Environmental Citizenship: A Systematic Review of the Literature" Sustainability 13, no. 5: 2622. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052622