September 15th, 2024 - August 31st, 2028 | PROJECT
Marginalized communities disproportionately experience the effects of environmental degradation such as sinking infrastructure, urban flooding, and coastal land loss as a result of legacies of segregation and lack of access to resources. To support youth in Black and Afro-Indigenous communities in Southeast Louisiana, the research team will work collaboratively with local community organizations to develop and enact a justice-centered framework for water literacy that responds to children's experiences and concerns about the environmental water issues that impact their everyday lives. The project will contribute to knowledge of how community-engaged science curriculum and teaching projects build relationships between communities and schools and how students and teachers grapple with the justice dimensions of issues that have disciplinary and social implications.
In partnership with a network of public charter schools in New Orleans, Louisiana, the research team will engage in four years of design-based research that centers community knowledge and lived experience. Guided by a steering committee of local water-focused community leaders and organizations, the team will work with approximately 16 teachers and 640 students in grades 3-8 to develop and study the implementation of the justice-centered water literacy curriculum units. Additional products will include professional development tools designed to amplify the community's experiential and historical knowledge as central to science learning.
Project Website(s)
(no project website provided)
Team Members
Kristin Gunckel, Principal Investigator, University of ArizonaFunders
Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: Advancing Informal STEM Learning (AISL), Discovery Research K-12
Award Number: 2409523
Funding Amount: $255,493.00
Tags
Access and Inclusion: Black | African American Communities | Ethnic | Racial | Indigenous and Tribal Communities | Urban
Audience: Educators | Teachers | Elementary School Children (6-10) | Families | General Public | Learning Researchers | Middle School Children (11-13)
Discipline: Climate | Education and learning science | General STEM
Resource Type: Project Descriptions | Projects
Environment Type: Informal | Formal Connections | K-12 Programs