[Playful Learning: a tool for Environmental Education].

Reichel Rodríguez-Miranda, Luis Palomo-Cordero, Michael Padilla-Mora, Andrea Corrales-Vargas, Berna van Wendel de Joode
Author Information
  1. Reichel Rodríguez-Miranda: Asistente de investigación en Programa Infantes y Salud Ambiental (ISA) del Instituto Regional de Estudios en Sustancias Tóxicas (IRET) de la Universidad Nacional (UNA), Costa Rica. ORCID
  2. Luis Palomo-Cordero: Asistente de investigación en Programa Infantes y Salud Ambiental (ISA) del Instituto Regional de Estudios en Sustancias Tóxicas (IRET) de la Universidad Nacional (UNA), Costa Rica. ORCID
  3. Michael Padilla-Mora: Académico e investigador de la División de Educación Básica (DEB), Centro de Investigación y Docencia en Educación (CIDE) de la Universidad Nacional (UNA), Costa Rica. ORCID
  4. Andrea Corrales-Vargas: Investigadora en Programa Infantes y Salud Ambiental (ISA) del Instituto Regional de Estudios en Sustancias Tóxicas (IRET) de la Universidad Nacional (UNA), Costa Rica. ORCID
  5. Berna van Wendel de Joode: Académica e investigadora en Programa Infantes y Salud Ambiental (ISA) del Instituto Regional de Estudios en Sustancias Tóxicas (IRET) de la Universidad Nacional (UNA), Costa Rica. ORCID

Abstract

Introduction: Playful learning for environmental education represents a participatory pedagogical mediation that considers the socio-environmental realities in which persons are immersed.
Objective: To promote environmental education, through playful, participatory, and flexible methods, to prevent pesticide exposure.
Methodology: Using geographic information systems, the distances between schools and bananas plantations were calculated. A playful and constructivism methodology was designed for primary school students (6 - 8.5 years), and their legal guardians. Subsequently, 148 workshops were developed in 37 rural Costa Rican schools, in which 2757 children and 387 adults participated.
Results: Thirty-eight percent (38 %) (n=14) of the schools were located at less than 100 meters from banana plantations. Playful communication generated a participatory environment, in which local needs were identified and collective knowledge was built about the effects of pesticide exposure on the environment and human health. Participants were able to identify the main preventive actions to reduce pesticide exposure.
Conclusions: Playful, participatory, and flexible methodologies in environmental education facilitate the process of sensitizing first cycle primary school students and their parents from rural communities about the risks of exposure to pesticides. The methodology used can be easily adapted for application in other environmental science studies.

Keywords

References

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Grants

  1. R24 ES028526/NIEHS NIH HHS

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0environmentalparticipatoryeducationexposurePlayfulpesticideschoolsplayfulflexiblemethodsplantationsmethodologyprimaryschoolstudentsruralenvironmentriskspesticidesIntroduction:learningrepresentspedagogicalmediationconsiderssocio-environmentalrealitiespersonsimmersedObjective:promotepreventMethodology:Usinggeographicinformationsystemsdistancesbananascalculatedconstructivismdesigned6-85yearslegalguardiansSubsequently148workshopsdeveloped37CostaRican2757children387adultsparticipatedResults:Thirty-eightpercent38%n=14locatedless100metersbananacommunicationgeneratedlocalneedsidentifiedcollectiveknowledgebuilteffectshumanhealthParticipantsableidentifymainpreventiveactionsreduceConclusions:methodologiesfacilitateprocesssensitizingfirstcycleparentscommunitiesusedcaneasilyadaptedapplicationsciencestudies[PlayfulLearning:toolEnvironmentalEducation]

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