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UBC Theses and Dissertations
Unintended consequences : an open educational resource about environmental health and environmental justice Hendricks, Stephenie Dilley
Abstract
Despite recommendations in 1999 by the Committee on Environmental Justice Health Sciences Policy Program at the U.S. Institute of Health that provided evidence for the importance of education among medical professionals, policy makers, and the public on environmental justice (EJ) and environmental health (EH) (Medicine viii), the presence of EH and EJ content within general post-secondary curriculum remains exiguous (Carlos Garibay et al. 921). While the U.S. National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences has argued that learning about EH “can facilitate students’ learning in science, math, language, history, and civics,'' (Hursh et al. 2), environmental curricula for mobilizing accessible knowledge about EH and EJ for students regardless of their academic discipline is particularly absent. “Unintended Consequences: An Open Educational Resource About Environmental Health and Environmental Justice,” is an Environmental Humanities project delivering a podcast centered post-secondary curriculum using subjective, qualitative Scholarly Personal Narrative (SPN) methodology for an Open Education Resources (OER) modular EH and EJ curriculum. Since SPN uses stories as data, students learn about EJ and EH through the voices of those with lived experiences in these realms, including about the complexities of EH and EJ identification and definition. Four distinct modules each contain an instructor guide, learning outcomes, key concepts, a podcast, a unique article, and curated materials. Four distinct module themes include: “A Brief and Recent History of Environmental Health,” “Health Professionals on the Front Lines,” “On the Fenceline,” and “What Instead?” (featuring Green Chemistry, alternatives chemicals assessment, just transitions, shareholder, and consumer advocacy and sustainable business). Limitations to this research include significant subjectivity throughout, a relatively small sample size, and the small scope meant as brief introductions to a variety of aspects of these very complex realms. “Unintended Consequences” fills a gap for an urgently needed portal to accessible knowledge about manmade toxic exposures in our environment that is crucial for success for sustaining a healthy world.
Item Metadata
Title |
Unintended consequences : an open educational resource about environmental health and environmental justice
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Creator | |
Supervisor | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
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Date Issued |
2024
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Description |
Despite recommendations in 1999 by the Committee on Environmental Justice Health Sciences Policy Program at the U.S. Institute of Health that provided evidence for the importance of education among medical professionals, policy makers, and the public on environmental justice (EJ) and environmental health (EH) (Medicine viii), the presence of EH and EJ content within general post-secondary curriculum remains exiguous (Carlos Garibay et al. 921). While the U.S. National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences has argued that learning about EH “can facilitate students’ learning in science, math, language, history, and civics,'' (Hursh et al. 2), environmental curricula for mobilizing accessible knowledge about EH and EJ for students regardless of their academic discipline is particularly absent. “Unintended Consequences: An Open Educational Resource About Environmental Health and Environmental Justice,” is an Environmental Humanities project delivering a podcast centered post-secondary curriculum using subjective, qualitative Scholarly Personal Narrative (SPN) methodology for an Open Education Resources (OER) modular EH and EJ curriculum. Since SPN uses stories as data, students learn about EJ and EH through the voices of those with lived experiences in these realms, including about the complexities of EH and EJ identification and definition. Four distinct modules each contain an instructor guide, learning outcomes, key concepts, a podcast, a unique article, and curated materials. Four distinct module themes include: “A Brief and Recent History of Environmental Health,” “Health Professionals on the Front Lines,” “On the Fenceline,” and “What Instead?” (featuring Green Chemistry, alternatives chemicals assessment, just transitions, shareholder, and consumer advocacy and sustainable business). Limitations to this research include significant subjectivity throughout, a relatively small sample size, and the small scope meant as brief introductions to a variety of aspects of these very complex realms. “Unintended Consequences” fills a gap for an urgently needed portal to accessible knowledge about manmade toxic exposures in our environment that is crucial for success for sustaining a healthy world.
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Genre | |
Type | |
Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2024-09-04
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0445310
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Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
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Graduation Date |
2024-09
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Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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DSpace
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Item Citations and Data
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International