Education for Sustainable Food Consumption in Home and Consumer Studies
Abstract
Education as a means to enable sustainable food consumption has gained increasing recognition as a vital means to decrease current burdens upon both natural resources and human health. In response, the Swedish compulsory school subject of home and consumer studies, which positions education about food as core content, has been revised to incorporate in its national syllabus a perspective of sustainable development since 2011. However, because sustainable development remains an ambiguous, contested concept with a range of definitions and interpretations, it is necessary to gain better understanding of what incorporating its perspective can entail in home and consumer studies, particularly regarding the core food-related content knowledge that it teaches. Building upon four papers, this thesis reports research guided by an interpretive and exploratory approach that involved analysing data from syllabuses, observations, recordings of in-class lessons and interviews with practising teachers. The results reveal two ways of understanding what incorporating a perspective of sustainable development can entail in home and consumer studies in Sweden. The first understanding proposes an enriched and unified practice in which the curriculum prioritises embodied forms of knowledge about healthy, ethical and resource-efficient food consumption by allowing a multi-relational, systems thinking approach while focusing a homemade meal practice. By contrast, the second understanding proposes a practice riddled with inconsistencies and contradictions in providing teaching and learning opportunities to attain the intended goals. This ultimately results in fragmented learning opportunities focused more on informed reasoning than on informed actions. Taken together, both understandings pose theoretical, conceptual and practical implications, both for home and consumer studies in particular and in education for sustainable food consumption in general.
Parts of work
I. Gisslevik, E., Wernersson, I., Åberg, H., & Larsson, C. (2016). Food in Relation to Sustainable Development Expressed in Swedish Syllabuses of Home and Consumer Studies: At Present and Past. Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 10(1), 68-87. ::doi::10.1177/0973408215627402 II. Gisslevik, E., Wernersson, I., & Larsson, C. (2017). Teaching Sustainable Food Consumption in Swedish Home Economics: A Case Study. International Journal of Home Economics, 10(2), 52-63. III. Gisslevik, E., Wernersson, I., & Larsson, C. (2018). Pupils’ Participation in and Response to Sustainable Food Education in Swedish Home and Consumer Studies: A Case-Study. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, ::doi::10.1080/00313831.2017.1415965 IV. Gisslevik, E., Wernersson, I., & Larsson, C. Home Economics Teachers’ Perceptions of Facilitating and Inhibiting Factors When Teaching Sustainable Food Consumption (Manuscript submitted for publication).
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Food and Nutrition, and Sport Science ; Institutionen för kost- och idrottsvetenskap
Disputation
Fredagen den 2 mars 2018, kl. 13.00. Göteborgs universitet, Pedagogen, Hus C, Margareta Huitfeldts auditorium
Date of defence
2018-03-02
emmalee.gisslevik@gu.se
Date
2018-02-08Author
Gisslevik, Emmalee
Keywords
Food
Home economics
Sustainable consumption
Education
Sustainable development
Compulsory school
Curriculum
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-951-7 (print)
978-91-7346-952-4 (pdf)
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences 411
Doctoral thesis
Language
eng