Responding to the Popular Demand: Itinerary for the Socio-Political Learning of Situated Agroecologies in Chile
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Demands for Quality Education
- (a)
- A transdisciplinary nature, that is, in which it seeks to transcend the disciplinary logic of the training usually received on the basis that social reality is complex and must be approached from a holistic perspective [13].
- (b)
- The diversity of knowledge is combined, both that delivered by academic training and that acquired through professional practice and/or trades and also that obtained by life experience in general, in consideration of the relevance of recognizing and respecting the various forms of learning and knowledge available, which allows generating learning communities.
- (c)
- The diversity of people in terms of age and gender interact, making available a multiplicity of approaches that, through collaborative dialogue, must respond to a need of the community with which a member of the group has a relationship that is participatively relieved by the community itself, resulting in a proposed solution that is of a holistic and sustainable nature for the benefit of the community [14].
1.2. Limitations for the Implementation of an Agroecological Curriculum
2. Materials and Methods
- (a)
- Mainstreaming of sustainability in university curricula: an initiative developed within the framework of the University Collaboration Protocol “Sustainable Campus”—with the sponsorship of the University Social Responsibility Program (RSU)—which aimed to establish an itinerary for the study of sustainability through a flexible curriculum and transformative and active learning methodologies. It was established as an instance of propaedeutic training in studies for sustainability [29].
- (b)
- Design of a training itinerary of agroecological specialty for the articulation of undergraduate and postgraduate degrees: designed to articulate the formation of university degrees oriented to agricultural commercialization—with postgraduate training through the intermediate studies of postgraduate studies. This sought to reinforce the agro-productive training of the university degree with agro-ecological sustainability subjects focused on the design and management of agroecosystems to maintain the agroecological attributes of food along the marketing and distribution chain [30].
- (c)
- Service-Learning as a competency-based training methodology in university education, whose purpose was to implement this methodology in the subjects of agroecology as a result from educational program design (b), based on the generation of an institutional commitment with community partners, e.g., group of farmers, the content structure, and its learning strategy, aimed at the organization of student learning through collaborative work requested by farmers [31].
- (d)
- Use of Simulated Markets as a method of Project-Based Learning (PBL) in undergraduate courses, with the purpose—for agroecological teaching purposes—of moving towards training processes that link the student with real situations. The experiences focused on the formulation and execution of projects aimed at the (re)connection of the local organic production of farmers based on agroecological principles with responsible consumption through circuits of social proximity and geographical proximity [32].
- (e)
- Evaluation of the impact of the implementation of transformational learning in training programs for sustainability in the framework of innovation in teaching [33]. The relationship between the innovative elements, i.e., transformational learning and active learning, and the didactic activities was established based on the dimensions addressed by the transformational learning proposal. Active learning was intrinsically linked to the moments and the ways in which the methodologies were applied during the learning process (Table 2).
3. Results
3.1. Certification in Sustainability: The Epistemological Rupture
3.2. Certification in Political Ecology: Changes in Reference Frameworks
3.3. Certification in Agroecology and Rural Development
3.4. Certification in Agroecology and Organic Agriculture
- The high value that teachers attribute to their participation stands out with regards to the performance of teachers involved in transformative and active learning processes (Table 3).
- With regards to the students’ perceptions of the processes, the results indicate changes in the reified conception of oneself, of others, and of the environment (Table 4).
- Farmers’ perceptions indicate the valuation of people, their work, and collaborative work as the most important aspects in the experiences developed (Table 5).
- With regards to the use of projects as a central element of active learning, the results of the evaluations indicate the aspects to be considered to overcome the specifications for each interaction group (Table 6).
4. Discussion
4.1. The Curricula Design
4.2. The Articulation of Itineraries
4.3. The Suitability of the Learning Methodologies
4.4. Teachers’ Performance
4.5. The Participation of the Students
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Teaching Innovation Project | Code | Objective |
---|---|---|
Mainstreaming sustainability in university curricula | REC-4095 | Establish a comprehensive proposal to incorporate sustainability across training programs |
Design of a training itinerary in agroecology at the undergraduate and postgraduate level | 038-2012 | Develop a proposal for agroecological training articulated between undergraduate and postgraduate training cycles |
Service-Learning (SL) as a competency-based training methodology in university education | 048-2012 | Incorporate the SL methodology in university agroecological training in collaboration with a community partner |
Use of Simulated Markets as a Project-Based Learning (PBL) method in undergraduate training | 029-2013 | Implement the PBL methodology as support in university agroecological training based on collaborative work with communities |
Assessing the impact of implementation of transformational learning | USA-1307 | Determine the perceptions of students and teachers in relation to the transformational learning implemented |
Innovative Element | Dimensions | Didactic Activity |
---|---|---|
Transformative learning | Spaces for reflection | Analysis of critical areas and the theoretical-epistemological foundations of the socio-ecological crisis, i.e., reading and debates in groups |
Meta-observation | The “place” from where one is living the learning process, and how one’s experience is being, i.e., individual reports and feedback | |
Collective space | The process emphasizes the recurrences or emotional, bodily, and linguistic learning that each participant expresses as a habit, i.e., dynamics of encounter and dialogue between peers | |
Moments | Didactic activity | |
Active learning | Contextualization of the problem to be addressed | Situate in time and space to identify causes and potentialities, i.e., search for literature and videos |
Approach to the group/community with which you interact | Approach and exchange with the different actors to know, plan, and execute projects/activities, i.e., visits, workshops, meetings, and work on the farm | |
Reflection on what has been done | Individual and group evaluations related to achievements, limitations, and experiences, i.e., discussions and workshops |
Categories | Evaluation (Out of 7) |
---|---|
1. The contents are taught by teachers with an interdisciplinary approach. | 6.8 |
2. The contents are taught in consideration of the heterogeneity of the group of students. | 7.0 |
3. The teachers present the contents in a way that invites questioning and questioning by the students. | 6.8 |
4. In the teaching-learning process, teachers recognize their emotional component and that of the student body. | 6.3 |
5. Teachers incorporate new frames of reference/new points of view on the contents they teach. | 6.8 |
6. Teachers use individualized and group techniques that promote dialogue within the classroom. | 6.0 |
7. The climate of the class encourages the spontaneous and generalized participation of the student body. | 6.5 |
8. Teachers positively reinforce the participation of students (they know how to listen). | 6.5 |
9. Teachers have an attitude of respect for the opinions of others. | 7.0 |
10. Teachers ensure that a climate of trust and respect prevails in the classroom among the participants. | 7.0 |
11. Teachers explain in detail the existing frames of reference, which comprise cognitive and emotional components. | 6.5 |
12. Teachers generate a space for feedback from the class performed. | 5.0 |
13. Teachers show concern and empathy for students. | 7.0 |
14. It promotes the transformation of mental habits, which constitute the usual way of thinking, feeling, and acting of people. | 6.8 |
15. Students are encouraged to take responsibility for their own learning. | 6.8 |
16. The possibility of seeing things from different points of view is encouraged. | 7.0 |
17. The teachers encouraged them to continue training in the subjects studied. | 7.0 |
Dimension | At the Beginning | At the End | |
---|---|---|---|
Of themselves | Affirmation | I can’t have influence. I have nothing relevant to contribute. | I’m with others. I’m entangled. |
Discourse | “I had the feeling that I wasn’t’ capable of being a relevant actor in social processes” (Questionnaire 23). “I had the feeling of not being of much contribution, because I felt that I didn’t want to talk, thus I better didn’t talk … So, I always doubted whether giving my opinion or point of view” (Report No. 20, 2015). [At the beginning] it was very difficult for me to open to dialogue … I told myself ‘maybe it’s not that necessary’, ‘maybe what I want to say will be annoying’, that kind of excuses nullifying all that is behind, invalidating myself” (Report No. 10, 2015). | “And this is what is happening in this long path, some leave, others arrive in our lives, and so it is how we all receive small pieces of other people that we never met, but that are somewhere in the person that is in front of us today, and so we will continue meeting others, and giving them small pieces that were given to us, to me the interconnection is there, among all of us and everything … we are here because in some place, many years ago, many dreamed and prayed for this moment. There is nothing left than to honor them in the same way that we honor the ones to come” (Report 16, 2015). “I can clearly see that we are part of a huge network of knowledges, which provides a foundation to each local initiative” (Questionnaire 3). | |
Of the environment | Affirmation | Crisis is imminent and unavoidable. Changes are too difficult. | I acknowledge complexity. I acknowledge diversity. |
Discourse | “I saw a path where everything was stuck and common. I only saw the typical system’s path and to go on with that, boring and sad … I only saw a territory wearied away, thus I only expected to continue eroding it” (Questionnaire 25). “I saw as very difficult to change my reality and to see it from another place” (Questionnaire 22). “[I thought] that society was too complex to achieve concrete changes” (Questionnaire 11). “I saw that socially there was almost none or a lacking development of socioecological issues troubling us” (Questionnaire 2). | “I understand the territories in a complex, multi-scalar way” (Questionnaire 13). “Today I can diagnose a territory with the tools acquired without a biased view. I relate to my territory, I understand its processes, I understand its problems better” (Questionnaire 18). “Understanding the communities from all the edges reviewed in the units, and understanding that these are linked according to the area where they are located and develop” (Questionnaire 1). | |
Of the actors | Affirmation | There are no allies. I don’t need allies. | I mobilize with others. We are co-creators. |
Discourse | “I saw that socially there was almost none or a lacking development of socioecological issues troubling us” (Questionnaire 2). “I thought that it was possible to conduct changes alone, that I didn’t need support to achieve what I decided” (Questionnaire 14). | I move with them, with my peers, to generate networks of linked worlds with others to create collectively, share learnings, knowledges, and experiences” (Report No 19, 2015). “The different actors … participate in the construction of this vision of the territory” (Questionnaire 4). |
Category | Narrative |
---|---|
Valorization of the person and their work | “We are glad that they have chosen us” (E3) “We see very well that they work with us” (E6) “For us it is important that a university considers us” (E1) |
Collaborative work | “You are giving us the opportunity to improve and learn” (E5) “The work you do with these students is very good, so you know how we work” (E8) “The work you do with us is very good, it should be repeated more often” (E10) |
Characteristics | Moment 1 | Moment 2 |
---|---|---|
Approach to the theoretical contents | Intensive school training | Adjustment and adaptation throughout the development of the project |
Formation of the group | One or two students and farmers | Students and farmers make up a single group |
Counter-operator leadership | Technical Support Professional | Farmers themselves |
Product definition | Consensus between farmers and teachers | Consensus between students and farmers |
Projects | Depending on interested students | One only per course |
Variable | Potentialities and Advantages |
---|---|
Curriculum designs |
|
Articulation of itineraries |
|
Adequacy of learning methodologies |
|
Teachers’ performance |
|
Students’ participation |
|
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Peredo Parada, S.; Barrera Salas, C.; Burbi, S. Responding to the Popular Demand: Itinerary for the Socio-Political Learning of Situated Agroecologies in Chile. Sustainability 2022, 14, 7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14137969
Peredo Parada S, Barrera Salas C, Burbi S. Responding to the Popular Demand: Itinerary for the Socio-Political Learning of Situated Agroecologies in Chile. Sustainability. 2022; 14(13):7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14137969
Chicago/Turabian StylePeredo Parada, Santiago, Claudia Barrera Salas, and Sara Burbi. 2022. "Responding to the Popular Demand: Itinerary for the Socio-Political Learning of Situated Agroecologies in Chile" Sustainability 14, no. 13: 7969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14137969