Description

Book Synopsis

Educating for Sustainable Development (ESD) approaches are holistic and interdisciplinary, values-driven, participatory, multi-method, locally relevant and emphasize critical thinking and problem-solving. This book explains how ESD approaches work in the Japanese context; their effects on different stakeholders; and their ultimate potential contribution to society in Japan. It considers ESD in both formal and informal education sectors, recognizing that even when classroom learning takes place it must be place-based and predicated on a specific community context. The book explores not only Why ESD', but why and how ESD in Japan has gained importance in the past decade and more recently in the wake of the triple disaster of March 2011. It considers how ESD can help Japan recover and adapt to disasters and take initiative in building more resilient and sustainable communities.

This volume asks the questions: What are some examples of positive contributions by ESD

Table of Contents

IntroductionTop-down and bottom-up ESD: divergence and convergence of Japanese ESD discourses and practices
Yoko Mochizuki

Part I: School-based approaches

Chapter 1. Formal ESD in Japan: dissolving walls between classroom and community
Jane Singer and Yoshiyuki Nagata

Chapter 2. Implications of 3.11 for disaster education and education for sustainable development in Japan
Aiko Sakurai and Rajib Shaw

Chapter 3. Assessing sustainability learning and practice at Moriyama High School, Shiga, Japan
Yi Zhou and Jane Singer

Chapter 4. Globalising school education in Japan: an investigation using the academic ability model
Toshiya Kodama

Chapter 5. Perspectives on education for sustainable development through local cultural heritage
Shizuo Nakazawa and Tadashi Izumitani

Chapter 6. An investigation into fairness and bias in educational materials produced by the Japanese government to teach school children about nuclear power and radiation
Shinobu Goto

Chapter 7. Collaborating for change: teaching and assessing a university community sustainability course in Japan and Vietnam
Tracey Gannon, Jane Singer and Benjamin McLellan

Part II: Community-based approaches

Chapter 8. Community-based, non-formal and informal ESD in Japan: where top-down and bottom-up approaches meet
Fumiko Noguchi and Toyoshi Sasaki

Chapter 9. Can civil society revitalise dying rural villages? The case of Kamiseya in Kyoto prefecture
Binxian Ji and Katsue Fukamachi

Chapter 10. Multi-stakeholder community education through environmental learning programmes in Nishinomiya
Miki Yoshizumi

Chapter 11. From challenge to opportunity: Japanese non-profit organisations harness post-3.11 civic engagement Sarajean Rossitto

Chapter 12. A radical approach from the periphery: informal ESD through rights recovery for indigenous AinuFumiko Noguchi

Chapter 13. The Tohoku Green Renaissance Project – networking green rebuilding activities after a mega-disaster
Tsubasa Iwabuchi and Noriko Takemoto

Chapter 14. The importance of genfukei (spirit of place) to citizen participation in community building in Zushi city Koichi Nagashima

Chapter 15. Exploring the values of rural communities through place-based education in Niigata prefecture
Takako Takano

Postscript. Reflections on visions of rebuilding Tohoku: the future of ESD as a response to risk in JapanYoko Mochizuki with Makoto Hatakeyama

Educating for Sustainability in Japan

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    A Paperback / softback by Jane Singer, Tracey Gannon, Fumiko Noguchi

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 23/08/2018
      ISBN13: 9781138615175, 978-1138615175
      ISBN10: 113861517X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Educating for Sustainable Development (ESD) approaches are holistic and interdisciplinary, values-driven, participatory, multi-method, locally relevant and emphasize critical thinking and problem-solving. This book explains how ESD approaches work in the Japanese context; their effects on different stakeholders; and their ultimate potential contribution to society in Japan. It considers ESD in both formal and informal education sectors, recognizing that even when classroom learning takes place it must be place-based and predicated on a specific community context. The book explores not only Why ESD', but why and how ESD in Japan has gained importance in the past decade and more recently in the wake of the triple disaster of March 2011. It considers how ESD can help Japan recover and adapt to disasters and take initiative in building more resilient and sustainable communities.

      This volume asks the questions: What are some examples of positive contributions by ESD

      Table of Contents

      IntroductionTop-down and bottom-up ESD: divergence and convergence of Japanese ESD discourses and practices
      Yoko Mochizuki

      Part I: School-based approaches

      Chapter 1. Formal ESD in Japan: dissolving walls between classroom and community
      Jane Singer and Yoshiyuki Nagata

      Chapter 2. Implications of 3.11 for disaster education and education for sustainable development in Japan
      Aiko Sakurai and Rajib Shaw

      Chapter 3. Assessing sustainability learning and practice at Moriyama High School, Shiga, Japan
      Yi Zhou and Jane Singer

      Chapter 4. Globalising school education in Japan: an investigation using the academic ability model
      Toshiya Kodama

      Chapter 5. Perspectives on education for sustainable development through local cultural heritage
      Shizuo Nakazawa and Tadashi Izumitani

      Chapter 6. An investigation into fairness and bias in educational materials produced by the Japanese government to teach school children about nuclear power and radiation
      Shinobu Goto

      Chapter 7. Collaborating for change: teaching and assessing a university community sustainability course in Japan and Vietnam
      Tracey Gannon, Jane Singer and Benjamin McLellan

      Part II: Community-based approaches

      Chapter 8. Community-based, non-formal and informal ESD in Japan: where top-down and bottom-up approaches meet
      Fumiko Noguchi and Toyoshi Sasaki

      Chapter 9. Can civil society revitalise dying rural villages? The case of Kamiseya in Kyoto prefecture
      Binxian Ji and Katsue Fukamachi

      Chapter 10. Multi-stakeholder community education through environmental learning programmes in Nishinomiya
      Miki Yoshizumi

      Chapter 11. From challenge to opportunity: Japanese non-profit organisations harness post-3.11 civic engagement Sarajean Rossitto

      Chapter 12. A radical approach from the periphery: informal ESD through rights recovery for indigenous AinuFumiko Noguchi

      Chapter 13. The Tohoku Green Renaissance Project – networking green rebuilding activities after a mega-disaster
      Tsubasa Iwabuchi and Noriko Takemoto

      Chapter 14. The importance of genfukei (spirit of place) to citizen participation in community building in Zushi city Koichi Nagashima

      Chapter 15. Exploring the values of rural communities through place-based education in Niigata prefecture
      Takako Takano

      Postscript. Reflections on visions of rebuilding Tohoku: the future of ESD as a response to risk in JapanYoko Mochizuki with Makoto Hatakeyama

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