This study investigated the relationships between knowledge and efficacy for teaching sustainability in a sample of 266 preservice primary teachers at a large, metropolitan university in Australia. A survey gathered information about the participant's attitudes and self-efficacy for education for sustainability, along with their perceived and actual knowledge of environmental sustainability issues. The participants typically believed they were confident in their abilities to engage with education for sustainability with self-efficacy increasing with increased levels of perceived knowledge. However no relationship was found between perceived knowledge and actual knowledge which suggests that the participants either do not feel constrained by their lack of knowledge, or are perhaps unaware of their actual knowledge of sustainability issues. This lack of relationship may have implications for the development of pedagogical content knowledge with preservice teachers potentially developing shallow, tokenistic approaches to Education for Sustainability. [Author abstract, ed]
Journal article
Education for sustainability: a case study of pre-service primary teachers' knowledge and efficacy
Australian Journal of Teacher Education, Vol.38(5), pp.32-46
2013
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Education for sustainability: a case study of pre-service primary teachers' knowledge and efficacy
- Creators
- Gerard Effeney - Australian Catholic UniversityJulie Davis - Queensland University of Technology
- Publication Details
- Australian Journal of Teacher Education, Vol.38(5), pp.32-46
- Identifiers
- 2956; 991012821869302368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Education; School of Education
- Resource Type
- Journal article