Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement

Education and learning possess powerful potential in affecting future resilience and community-based monitoring. This research focuses on examining the connections and feedbacks between social-environmental systems (SESs), resilience, and compulsory education. We suggest scenarios development as a w...

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Main Authors: Cost, Douglas, Lovecraft, A. L.
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10991
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/10991 2023-05-15T14:50:27+02:00 Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement Cost, Douglas Lovecraft, A. L. 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10991 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10991 Poster 2016 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:36Z Education and learning possess powerful potential in affecting future resilience and community-based monitoring. This research focuses on examining the connections and feedbacks between social-environmental systems (SESs), resilience, and compulsory education. We suggest scenarios development as a way to link local-scale interest in change to education and monitoring of key variables for resilience. SESs have been problematized as frequently having a poor fit between environmental change and policy solutions. This has led to discussion and debate over the role of schools in addressing local knowledge, environmental changes, and community priorities. In Alaska and other Arctic countries, the role of public schools in improving this fit has been largely overlooked. This research explains that as extensions of governments, public schools offer an opportunity to create better linkages between societies and environments through governance. Secondarily, at the individual level, education is a vital component of resilience, but such education must embrace multiple perspectives in its curriculum in order to honor and access the diversity offered by local, traditional ecological knowledge and Western methods. Scenarios are inherently transdisciplinary processes that integrate different knowledge perspectives as participants consider what matters the most and what is most uncertain in the long-range future. We report research results from two linked scenarios projects. The Northern Alaska Scenarios Project (NASP) drew resident expert participants from the North Slope and Northwest Arctic Boroughs and the Arctic Future Makers project (AFM) that completed a scenarios exercise with high school students from across the Northwest Arctic Borough. Still Image Arctic north slope Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Arctic
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description Education and learning possess powerful potential in affecting future resilience and community-based monitoring. This research focuses on examining the connections and feedbacks between social-environmental systems (SESs), resilience, and compulsory education. We suggest scenarios development as a way to link local-scale interest in change to education and monitoring of key variables for resilience. SESs have been problematized as frequently having a poor fit between environmental change and policy solutions. This has led to discussion and debate over the role of schools in addressing local knowledge, environmental changes, and community priorities. In Alaska and other Arctic countries, the role of public schools in improving this fit has been largely overlooked. This research explains that as extensions of governments, public schools offer an opportunity to create better linkages between societies and environments through governance. Secondarily, at the individual level, education is a vital component of resilience, but such education must embrace multiple perspectives in its curriculum in order to honor and access the diversity offered by local, traditional ecological knowledge and Western methods. Scenarios are inherently transdisciplinary processes that integrate different knowledge perspectives as participants consider what matters the most and what is most uncertain in the long-range future. We report research results from two linked scenarios projects. The Northern Alaska Scenarios Project (NASP) drew resident expert participants from the North Slope and Northwest Arctic Boroughs and the Arctic Future Makers project (AFM) that completed a scenarios exercise with high school students from across the Northwest Arctic Borough.
format Still Image
author Cost, Douglas
Lovecraft, A. L.
spellingShingle Cost, Douglas
Lovecraft, A. L.
Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
author_facet Cost, Douglas
Lovecraft, A. L.
author_sort Cost, Douglas
title Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
title_short Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
title_full Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
title_fullStr Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
title_full_unstemmed Education, Resilience, and Scenarios: Creating Capacity for Community- Based Observations through Youth Engagement
title_sort education, resilience, and scenarios: creating capacity for community- based observations through youth engagement
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10991
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