David Hicks’s research while affiliated with Higher Education Academy and other places

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Publications (1)


Envisioning the Future: the challenge for environmental educators
  • Article

February 1996

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33 Reads

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43 Citations

David Hicks

One of the main concerns of environmental education is the need to create a more ecologically sustainable future, yet environmental educators often lack the expertise needed to explore alternative futures in this way. However, there is much of value that can be learnt from futures studies and from the work of futurists. In particular futures studies is interested in how people view the future and ways of cultivating clearer images of preferred futures. One established strategy for this is the futures workshop and examples are given of work by Robert Jungk, Warren Ziegler and Elise Boulding in this field. It is suggested that a valuable cross‐fertilisation of ideas could thus occur between environmental educators and such futurists.

Citations (1)


... Concerning the future of the world (item 2) the students of pedagogy had very inadequate attitudes, it has been reported that the beliefs that people have about what the future will bring contribute to the meaning given to the present, often actions are directed towards the future that is desired or the future that is thought to come (Bell, 1998 as quoted in Schreiner, 2006;Schreiner and Sjoberg, 2005). The images of the future and actions shows the relevance for science and environmental education of conducting studies of young people's images (Hicks, 1996). By knowing young people's images of the future, we can better understand their motivations, decisions, and actions. ...

Reference:

Attitudes Towards Science, Technology, and Environment: A Look from Higher Education Students Through the Roses Project
Envisioning the Future: the challenge for environmental educators
  • Citing Article
  • February 1996