“…Although water-focused teaching and learning can help students develop a more comprehensive understanding of water systems (Çoban et al, 2011;Davis, 2005;Havu-Nuutinen et al, 2011;McCarroll & Hamann, 2020), research indicates that students exhibit fragmented or incomplete understanding about socio-hydrologic systems posing them difficulties for making connections between water and its natural and human components (Çoban et al, 2011;Covitt et al, 2009;Gunckel et al, 2012;Havu-Nuutinen et al, 2011;Martínez-Borreguero et al, 2020;McCarroll & Hamman, 2020;Pan & Liu, 2018;Sadler et al, 2017;Shepardson et al, 2007;White et al, 2022), including those that are most pertinent to them (Fremerey et al, 2014;Gunkel et al, 2012;Shepardson et al, 2007). Water education experiences may not provide students sufficient opportunities to build upon prior knowledge and consider the location and social environment, nor their inherent values and ethical dimensions (Amahmid et al, 2019;Belland et al, 2015;Ben-zvi-Assarf & Orion, 2005;Covitt et al, 2009;Dean et al, 2016;Havu-Nuutinen et al, 2011;Littledyke, 2008;McCarroll & Hamann, 2020;Martínez-Borreguero et al, 2020;Shepardson et al, 2007). When students investigate these relations, they seem to overemphasize the human components with which they are most familiar (Ben-zvi-Assarf & Orion, 2005;White et al, 2022), or have difficulties linking different concepts of water systems with practical aspects occurring within their own context (Shepardson et al, 2007).…”