best rolex replica site high-quality replica watches Best Replica Watches
Archive:

A Participatory Photographic Lens on Sustainability Competencies & the Sustainable Development Goals

By Kim Wahl, Audrey P. Stanton and Andrea Hicks

Abstract: Although participatory photography methods (PPM) have been increasing in scientific research, not many studies are well-known related to PPM and sustainable development, including connections to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The purpose of this study is to explore place-based participatory photography (combined auto-photography and photo essay or auto-photographic essay) methods to examine how they support sustainability competencies. Course design included the SDGs connected to a campus sustainability map to support learning in a sustainability higher education classroom. Twenty-five self-selected students in a semester-long sustainability course at the University of Wisconsin–Madison (UW–Madison) explored sustainability concepts connected to their university campus using place-based participatory photography methods. Data was collected from students and consisted of photographs with titles and narratives from the beginning (pre-assessment) and the end (post-assessment) of the semester. The study included member checking with student thematic analysis and inter-rater reliability of coding. In findings, student participants’ data had more connections to the intrapersonal competency in the pre-assessment than the post-assessment. The post-assessment findings indicated that participatory photography methods (PPM) connected to a campus sustainability map and the SDGs strengthened the knowledge and systems thinking competencies as connected to socio-environmental systems. PPM did not lend itself well to strategic thinking or technical skills related to sustainability competencies. This participatory photography study adds valuable insight into supporting the sustainability competencies related to the SDGs.

Continue Reading