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UBC Theses and Dissertations

Towards an ecology of knowledge for sustainable food system education Valley, William Cameron

Abstract

This study investigates the Land, Food, and Community (LFC) series of core courses within the Faculty of Land and Food Systems at the University of British Columbia (Vancouver) as an example of a sustainable food system education (SFSE) program. SFSE programs are emerging across North America as an alternative approach to developing future professionals within the food system. SFSE programs share common curricular use of systems-based, inter- and trans- disciplinary, experiential learning approaches. The study has two components. The first component focuses on the theoretical framework of the LFC series. The second component focuses on experiences of a sample of students enrolled in a second-year course in 2012. Using a qualitative case study methodology, I incorporate autoethnographic experiences, document analysis, semi-structured interviews, and analysis of written responses to a dual-position food security problem to address the following research objectives: identify and situate the LFC theoretical framework within a diversity of scholarly domains; determine the impact of specific pedagogical strategies in the second-year course on students’ epistemic and ontological cognitive development (EOCD); and, investigate the correspondence between EOCD and systems competencies in addressing food systems problems. Results from the first component identify four key elements of the LFC theoretical framework: the ecology of knowledge, the community of learners, polycultures of the mind, and systems approaches. The elements are situated within Freirean critical constructivist learning theory, Bateson’s theory of ecological knowing, cognitive flexibility theory, and community- engaged scholarship. Results from the second component suggest that the pedagogical activities in the second-year course had an impact on participants’ EOCD by helping students understand the concepts of holism and pluralism as well as demonstrating the limitations of reductionism and the uncertainty of knowledge in ill-structured domains. Evidence suggests that systems thinking competencies are not being adequately developed in the second-year course. The study found limited evidence of correspondence between EOCD and the ability to apply systems principles to address a food system issue. The study concludes with a discussion on characteristics of a signature pedagogy for SFSE programs and a proposed scaffolding of EOCD and the development of systems thinking competencies across the LFC series.

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada