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Eliciting Children’s/Young People’s (Group) Engagement with Scenarios as Participatory Research Practice for Exploring and Extending Responses to Climate Change

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dc.contributor.author Romm, Norma R.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2020-08-03T14:03:43Z
dc.date.available 2020-08-03T14:03:43Z
dc.date.issued 2020-03-05
dc.identifier.citation Romm, Norma R.A. (2020). Eliciting Children’s/Young People’s (Group) Engagement with Scenarios as Participatory Research Practice for Exploring and Extending Responses to Climate Change. Participatory Educational Research. Participatory Educational Research 7(1), i-xiv en
dc.identifier.issn 21486123
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26585
dc.description.abstract In this article I provide an account of my use (in a particular context) of a ‘post qualitative inquiry’ approach, with my recognition that ways of approaching issues to be explored with participants, and the method of exploration, carry social and ecological consequences. The research was initiated in a school in South Africa with a sample of ten (Black) Grade 9 children (aged 14–15). Groups of two to three children engaged with a number of scenarios supplied by me (‘business as usual’, ‘small changes’, and ‘sustainable future’) concerning possible responses to climate change. In each group the children worked together towards jointly creating options for unsettling the ‘business as usual’ scenario while exploring the other scenarios as alternatives. The article concentrates on the justification for using scenarios as a basis for inviting the children to discuss together their responses to climate change, with a view to the research inputting into their visioning and their understandings of possibilities for agency (individual and collective). It also concentrates on my intent to strengthen the notion of collaborative visioning, which is in keeping with Indigenous understandings of relational knowing. The research was intended, inter alia, to contribute to the children’s appreciation of this way of learning. en
dc.language.iso en_US en
dc.publisher Dergi Park Academic en
dc.subject Climate change research en
dc.subject engagement with scenarios; en
dc.subject post qualitative inquiry; en
dc.subject research as future forming. en
dc.title Eliciting Children’s/Young People’s (Group) Engagement with Scenarios as Participatory Research Practice for Exploring and Extending Responses to Climate Change en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Adult Basic Education (ABET) en


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