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    place-based learning

    Explore "place-based learning" with insightful episodes like "Learning, Space, and Place in Higher Education", "Refresh: Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish", "Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish", "Place-Based Learning Through Story and Mapping with Kelsey Keller" and "Place-Based Learning" from podcasts like ""Making College "Worth It"", "Limed: Teaching with a Twist", "Limed: Teaching with a Twist", "Teach Outdoors" and "Principal Perspectives"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Learning, Space, and Place in Higher Education

    Learning, Space, and Place in Higher Education

    See our extended episode notes at https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/learning-space-and-place-in-higher-education/.

    In this episode, we visit with Susan Hrach, director of the Faculty Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning and professor of English at Columbus State University, and Ashley Holmes, interim director of Teaching Effectiveness in the Center for Teaching, Learning, and Online Education, and associate professor of English at Georgia State University in downtown Atlanta. Both have written about the spaces learners embody and interact with during their college studies.

    This episode is co-hosted by Jessie L. Moore, Director of Elon University’s Center for Engaged Learning, and Nolan Schultheis, a first-year student at Elon University, studying Psychology with an interest in law. Nolan Schultheis edited the episode. Making College “Worth It” is produced by Elon University’s Center for Engaged Learning.

    Refresh: Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish

    Refresh: Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish

    See the full show notes for this episode at https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/refresh-place-based-learning-along-the-duwamish/

    In this episode of Limed: Teaching with a Twist, host, Matt Wittstein follows-up with Dr. Ben Machado from Season 1, Episode 3 “Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish.” Matt and Ben have a casual conversation about how Ben’s course went, some of the successes and challenges he faced, and what Ben is hopeful for in the future of their multi-disciplinary project centering the indigenous people of Seattle and the region.

    This episode was hosted by Matt Wittstein, edited by Jeremiah Timberlake, and produced by Matt Wittstein in collaboration with the Elon University Center for Engaged Learning.

    Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish

    Place-Based Learning Along the Duwamish

    See our extended show notes at https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/place-based-learning-along-the-duwamish/.

    This episode of Limed: Teaching with a Twist is hosted by Matt Wittstein and produced by Dhvani Toprani and Matt Wittstein in collaboration with the Center for Engaged Learning.

    About the Guest 

    Ben Machado has been teaching biology to community college students for the last 15 years in Oregon, California, and Washington, where he currently teaches at South Seattle College. He tries to imbue high-impact teaching practices into every part of his curriculum and thinks that helping underserved populations of students experience the joy of learning biology is always the best part of his day. Currently Ben is trying to bring a greater awareness of the area around South Seattle College to his students by focusing some of his lessons on the Duwamish River. More info on this incredible river that has shaped Seattle’s history can be found here: http://www.duwamishalive.org/our-duwamish-river/  

    About the Panel 

    Kelsey Bitting is an Assistant Professor in the Environmental Studies Department at Elon University, and a former Associate Director for Elon’s Center for the Advancement of Teaching and Learning. In her teaching, she incorporates a wide range of active and student-centered pedagogies, including place-based, community-engaged, and inquiry-based activities as well as contemplative pedagogy practices. She is the co-author of the peer-reviewed place-based unit curriculum, What’s in the Water?, and co-editor of the Guided Inquiry Introductory Geology Labs collection, both available on Teach the Earth. As a geoscience education researcher, she has published in The Journal of Geoscience Education and Research in Science Education, contributed to the development of the Geoscience Education Research community’s Grand Challenges effort, and formerly served as the president of the Geoscience Education Research Division of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers.  Learn more about her work and connect on LinkedIn.

    Scott Morrison is an Associate Professor of Education at Elon University. He spent 11 years as a middle school English, social studies, and science teacher in Blowing Rock, NC, where he built and maintained a garden with his students. In graduate school he realized that he was an ecologically minded teacher (Moroye, 2009). That is, he brought his environmental values and beliefs into the classroom even though he was not trained or required to do so. Scott teaches courses on environmental education and garden-based learning so that future teachers have the knowledge, skills, and experiences necessary for taking students outside during the school day. His research focuses on everyday environmental education, abolitionist teaching outside, ecologically minded teaching, nature-based learning, and social media in teacher education.  Find him on Twitter (@scomorrison) and Instagram (@sco.morrison and @teachingoutside).  

    Dani Toma-Harrold is a senior Elementary Education major with minors in African and African American Studies and Environmental Education at Elon University in North Carolina. While she is originally from Decatur, GA, she plans to stay in NC to teach (hopefully 3rd grade!). Dani is incredibly passionate about her research on the connections between antiracism, abolitionist teaching and place-based environmental education, or teaching and learning outside. Starting this study almost 2 years ago, she has presented at 7 national and international conferences, hosted a 2-part webinar series for a national garden support organization, created 2 workshops preparing a manuscript to publish her findings. Outside of classes, her 3rd grade student-teaching placement, and research, you can find Dani running around campus with Elon Runs or working at the local elementary school’s garden club! 

    Place-Based Learning Through Story and Mapping with Kelsey Keller

    Place-Based Learning Through Story and Mapping with Kelsey Keller

    Mentoring Nature Connections is all about sharing our experiences and questions about outdoor explorations.  I'm hoping you'll join us on our journey of investigating nature with our learners.  Today we are joined by Kelsey Keller, a Grade 3/4/5 Montessori teacher at Baker Drive in Coquitlam, BC.  Together we are exploring the topic of place-based learning and how we make the connection between story, perspective, and mapping. 

    Key questions we are going to tackle today include:

    How can we see place as being our teacher?

    How can we uncover the history of our land?

    How can we structure our exploration time during #Forestschool? 


    I'm Lauren MacLean and I'm a mentoring support teacher in the area of mathematics and outdoor learning for the Coquitlam district in BC.

    Website: mentoringnatureconnections.wordpress.com

    Twitter: @lkmaclean

    Instagram: @mentoringnatureconnections


    Information on today's guest: Kelsey Keller

    Website: kelseykeller.com

    Twitter: @montessorimice

     

    Inspirational people we discussed:

    Erin Kenny, the founder of Cedarsong Nature School in Washington, said that “children cannot bounce off the walls if we take away the walls.”

     David Jardine and his views on restlessness. 

    Novelty Nature Notes:

    Trees cannot die of old age. Something external has to kill them. This makes them the oldest living organism on Earth.

    Wood Wide Web.  Trees have a secret underground messaging system!