Masterarbeit, 2021
68 Seiten, Note: Pass
This study investigates how Higher Education Institutions (HEI) can better address climate-anxiety, a growing mental health concern among students in sustainability-related fields. The research focuses on the potential of ecovillages as non-formal actors in educational tourism to help students cope with climate-anxiety. The study analyzes the shortcomings of traditional climate change education in HEI, which often neglects social and emotional learning, and explores how ecovillages can offer novel pedagogical approaches to balance these shortcomings. The research utilizes five case studies of distinct ecovillages on three continents to examine the capacity of ecovillages for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) and its impact on student well-being.
This study examines the intersection of climate-anxiety, educational tourism, and ecovillages. Key themes include: climate-anxiety in HEI, Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), experiential learning, ecovillages as destinations, coping mechanisms for climate-anxiety, and the impact of hands-on learning experiences on student well-being.
Climate-anxiety is a mental health concern characterized by chronic fear of environmental doom. It is particularly prevalent among students in sustainability-related fields who are constantly exposed to data about environmental destruction.
Ecovillages provide hands-on, experiential learning and community-based living. This active engagement helps students move from feelings of helplessness to a sense of agency and empowerment through practical sustainability techniques.
It is a form of travel where students visit intentional communities (ecovillages) to learn about sustainable living, regenerative agriculture, and social cooperation through direct participation and non-formal education.
Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) often focus heavily on cognitive learning (facts and data) while neglecting the social and emotional aspects of learning, leaving students overwhelmed by the scale of the climate crisis.
The study found that visits to ecovillages like Suderbyn or Sieben Linden significantly improved students' coping mechanisms by balancing academic knowledge with practical action and emotional support.
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