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characteristics (such as values, attitudes, sensitivity and control skills). An environmentally
literate person is engaged to preserve the dynamic equilibrium between humans and nature.
(Marcinkowski, 1991; Roth, 1992) Environmental literacy is cross-curricular and closely
resembles the broad definitions of scientific literacy (Holbrook & Rannikmae, 2009;
Simmons, 1989) and ecoliteracy (Nichols, 2010).
Multiple models have been published to illustrate environmental literacy (e.g. Heimlich &
Ardoin, 2008; Kaiser et al., 1999) and to measure it (Dunlap et al., 2000; Hollweg et al., 2011;
Johnstone & Reid, 1981; Kaiser et al., 1999; Leeming, Dwyer & Bracken, 1995; Schultz,
Zelezny & Dalrympe, 2000; Stern, 2000; Uitto & Saloranta, 2010a; Uitto et al., 2011). The
opportunities and boundaries of these and other models are reviewed in Juntunen (2013).
A teacher will most probably promote environmental literacy in a classroom if she/he is aware
of the societal power relationships and able to view the environment as personally or socially
meaningful. Also, moral responsibility, environmental sensitivity, ability to critically evaluate
one’s own culture and capability and willingness to act for the environment affect the amount
and quality of a teacher’s ESD choices. (Hsu & Roth, 1998; Käpylä & Wahlström, 2000)
Similarly, the more the students have personal experiences from school or from their daily
life, the more easily they contribute positively to environmental protection (Palmer, 1998;
Saloranta & Uitto, 2010; Uitto et al., 2011). Thus, the teaching methods which promote the
students’ active role and value-related questions are especially needed in chemistry education.
For instance, in chemistry the questions can focus on different levels (applied from Wilmes &
Howarth, 2009):
i) Personal level: Which is the better choice: tap water or bottled water?
ii) Societal level: ”What is the best way to produce energy for a certain need?”
iii) Global level: ”Why do different countries use different amounts of natural
resources?”
One answer is to promote inquiry-based teaching methods (see Section 3.2.5. and Rocard et
al., 2007; Tirri et al., 2012; Wilmes & Howarth, 2009) and cross-curricular approaches that
have been rarely utilised so far (Kärnä et al., 2012). Application of socio-scientific issues (see
Section 3.2.3.) in various learning environments is also needed to raise the level of
environmental literacy (Saloranta & Uitto, 2010). Well-designed education materials promote
the learning of content knowledge and the acquiring of meaningful real-life experiences
(Lester et al., 2006).
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