Preservice elementary teachers' emotional connections and disconnections to climate change in a science course

Due to emotions' evaluative nature, they provide a lens for understanding personal and urgent engagement with events and experiences. Grounding this work in ethnography and sociolinguistics, I utilized discourse analysis to study the emotions of 30 preservice elementary teachers expressed about...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of research in science teaching Vol. 52; no. 9; pp. 1296 - 1324
Main Author Hufnagel, Elizabeth
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.11.2015
Wiley-Blackwell
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Summary:Due to emotions' evaluative nature, they provide a lens for understanding personal and urgent engagement with events and experiences. Grounding this work in ethnography and sociolinguistics, I utilized discourse analysis to study the emotions of 30 preservice elementary teachers expressed about climate change in a science course. I describe the emotional connections and disconnections within and across the three aspects of climate change that students engaged with most deeply: the impacts, lack of action, and causes of climate change. These emotional connections and disconnections provide new ways to understand preservice elementary teachers' emotional sense‐making of this scientific issue. Implications for examining features of emotions to make salient emotional sense‐making of climate change are discussed. This emotional engagement differs from other findings in which people typically distance themselves from climate change. In addition, the value of analyzing all emotional expressions (“positive” and “negative”) in science learning settings is explained. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 52: 1296–1324, 2015.
Bibliography:istex:3FA76357E5F5AD262068FADF7C5CDD0532DF2989
ArticleID:TEA21245
ark:/67375/WNG-8GX0BDGM-X
ISSN:0022-4308
1098-2736
DOI:10.1002/tea.21245