Pedagogy with a heartbeat: The transformative potential of citizen science in education

Jacqueline Goldin, Caroline Suransky
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Abstract

Over the past few years, we have worked together in a citizen science project called Diamonds on the Soles of our Feet (see also Goldin et al. 2021, Goldin et al., 2023). In this project we engaged with 420 young learners in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. We came to see participating schools as collaborative ecosystems where young citizens become entangled with water through experiential encounters that make science alive and relevant. Through our engagement with citizen science, we experienced the transformative power of affect and the relevance of emotions in education as a social and political project. In our pedagogy we depart from the idea that human beings are separate from the biosphere, thus recognising the interdependency of all life forms on earth. We believe that keeping science education in laboratories and libraries affirms what Bozalek and Zemblyas (2023) call “privileged irresponsibility”. We propose that citizen science and its transformative potential can be one way to redress such irresponsibility. Through impactful encounters with human – nonhuman entanglement and the emotions which are evoked in this process, citizen science can create opportunities for responseability (Bozalek & Zemblyas, 2023), through teaching and learning with the heart. Such entanglement also resonates with relationality as the currency of care theorists. In the context of our citizen science work, caring for unfamiliar others is a form of non-humancentred care with unfamiliar water bodies in which the binary of inside-outside learning becomes porous as the geographies of water penetrate the classroom walls. In Diamonds on the Soles of our Feet, we noted how watery spaces and images move back and forth caring-with and through human bodies – waterbodies to school, school to waterbodies. The entanglement with the nonhuman resonates with Massumi’s (2015) notion of becoming where there is an unrolling of an event that is a becoming of two together.
有心跳的教学法:公民科学在教育中的变革潜力
在过去几年中,我们共同开展了一个名为 "脚底的钻石 "的公民科学项目(另见戈尔丁等人,2021 年;戈尔丁等人,2023 年)。在这个项目中,我们与南非林波波省的 420 名青年学生进行了接触。我们将参与的学校视为一个合作的生态系统,在这里,年轻的公民通过体验式接触与水纠缠在一起,使科学变得生动而有意义。通过与公民科学的接触,我们体验到了情感的变革力量,以及情感在作为社会和政治项目的教育中的相关性。在我们的教学法中,我们摒弃了人类与生物圈相分离的观念,从而认识到地球上所有生命形式的相互依存性。我们认为,将科学教育保留在实验室和图书馆中,肯定了 Bozalek 和 Zemblyas(2023 年)所说的 "特权下的不负责任"。我们建议,公民科学及其变革潜力可以成为纠正这种不负责任的一种方式。通过与人类-非人类的纠缠和在此过程中唤起的情感的有影响力的接触,公民科学可以通过用心教学和学习,为可回应性创造机会(Bozalek & Zemblyas,2023 年)。这种纠缠也与作为关爱理论家的货币的关系性产生了共鸣。在我们的公民科学工作中,对陌生他人的关爱是对陌生水体的一种非人文关怀形式,在这种形式中,随着水的地理环境渗透到教室的墙壁,内部-外部学习的二元对立变得多孔。在《脚底的钻石》一书中,我们注意到水的空间和图像是如何与人的身体以及通过人的身体--水体到学校,学校到水体--来回移动的。与非人类的纠缠与马苏米(2015 年)的 "成为 "概念产生了共鸣,在马苏米的概念中,"成为 "是一个事件的展开,是两个人的共同成为。
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