From Landfill to Loom: Two Teacher-Researchers Chronicle Their Sustainability Narratives via The Secret Under My Skin

Authors

  • Cynthia Marlene Morawski Faculty of Education University of Ottawa
  • Catherine-Laura Dunnington University of Ottawa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40377

Keywords:

sustainability education, language arts, Louise Rosenblatt, reader response theory, narrative inquiry

Abstract

Traditionally, the responsibility for sustainability education has been assigned to the fields of science, engineering, technology and outdoor education. More recently, English language arts have begun to play an integral role in educating students on the importance of preserving the environment for future generations. Pertinent research, however, indicates that many teachers, including those teaching English, do not feel fully prepared to address sustainability in their classrooms. Such teachers would benefit from either pre-service or in-service support where they would have opportunities to gain more knowledge about sustainability, while also critically inquiring into their related pedagogical beliefs and practices. Before beginning the process of planning and implementing relevant sustainability education experiences for English teachers, it is imperative that we, two teacher educators, first examine our own teaching narratives related to this important topic. Focusing on the dystopian young adult novel, The Secret Under My Skin (McNaughton, 2000), we make generous use of Rosenblatt’s (1995) transactional theory of reader response to critically inquire into past experiences that shape our recurrent views and actions in the classroom. We express our back-and-forth transactions in interspersing sections of poetry, prose and image, including emerging questions to consider as starting points for future engagement with teachers on the integration of sustainability education into the English language arts curriculum at the secondary school level.

Author Biographies

Cynthia Marlene Morawski, Faculty of Education University of Ottawa

Cynthia Morawski, Professor in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa, received her Doctorate from Columbia University Teachers College in teaching and curriculum with a specialization in reading and language arts. Her research interests include teaching narratives, adolescent literacies, multimodald learning, learning differences, and poetics of memory work. She teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses in literacy, the arts, and children’s and young adult literature.

Catherine-Laura Dunnington, University of Ottawa

Catherine-Laura Dunnington (formerly Tremblay-Dion) is a doctoral candidate at the University of Ottawa in the Faculty of Education. Her M.Ed. was obtained at the University of Montana where she subsequently taught preschool for several years. Her work focuses on literacy, early childhood education, and arts-based learning. She has been published in the International Journal of Education and the Arts, Bookbird: An International Journal of Children’s Literature, Education Review, and Root & Star Magazine.

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Published

02-03-2020

How to Cite

Morawski, C. M., & Dunnington, C.-L. (2020). From Landfill to Loom: Two Teacher-Researchers Chronicle Their Sustainability Narratives via The Secret Under My Skin. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 17(2), 80–99. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40377

Issue

Section

Articles