2014
DOI: 10.1080/13504622.2014.989962
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The impact of childhood reading on the development of environmental values

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…As this article is focusing on the numbers of different types of books, the data are presented in graph form to make the frequencies easier to see. Details on the participants' comments on their early reading and their scripts to their own stories are available in another article (Freestone & O'Toole, 2014), which focuses on the types/genres of literature read by the participants.…”
Section: Data and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As this article is focusing on the numbers of different types of books, the data are presented in graph form to make the frequencies easier to see. Details on the participants' comments on their early reading and their scripts to their own stories are available in another article (Freestone & O'Toole, 2014), which focuses on the types/genres of literature read by the participants.…”
Section: Data and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A research project was undertaken to examine the potential influence of reading on environmental educators in Australia to ascertain if any genre or story type could potentially encourage future generations to consider more positive environmental responses (Freestone & O'Toole, 2014). This study set out to discover what participants' reading appeared to be influential in their lives and when ABOUT THE AUTHORS The interaction of literacy, environmental education, patterns of recalled literature and the development of values that is integral to this paper is part of a wider investigation into the antecedents of adult commitment and the consequent relative importance of various levels of schooling.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nostalgic, pastoral texts that I propose to include in environmental education curricula adhere to this definition, as I will establish in the pedagogy section of this project. Reading fiction grounded in ecological realities supports the incidental learning condoned by Freestone and O'Toole (2016), in which narratives provide a subtle approach to environmental issues. In her decade-long inquiry into the capacity of children's books to affect change, Tatar (2009) concluded that "words and images…resonate in mysterious ways with real-life experiences" (p. 205).…”
Section: Children But This Tendency To Place Children Within or Adjamentioning
confidence: 94%
“…But Sharpe also cites that fact-oriented textbooks that delve into difficult issues are often not available, or age-appropriate for younger learners (p. 125). As an alternative method of delivery, Fischer (2017) and Freestone and O'Toole (2016) argue that children's literature contributes to a young reader's sense of their own environments and has an important role in place-based curricula, perhaps more than overtly didactic environmental texts.…”
Section: An Indirect Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
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