Ways of Knowing, Sharing, and Translating Agricultural Knowledge and Perspectives: Alternative Epistemologies across Non-formal and Informal Settings

Authors

  • Matthew M. Mars University of Arizona
  • Anna L. Ball University of Missouri

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.2016.01056

Keywords:

agricultural literacy, agricultural epistemology, non-formal learning, informal learning

Abstract

The mainstream agricultural literacy movement has been mostly focused on school-based learning through formal curricula and standardized non-formal models (e.g., FFA, 4-H). The purpose of the current study is to qualitatively explore through a grounded theory approach, the development, sharing, and translation of diverse forms of agricultural knowledge and perspectives among adult learners within informal and non-formal learning settings. Data collected through interviews with and naturalistic observation of agricultural practitioners with diverse personal and professional backgrounds are used to guide the development of a holistic agricultural epistemology framework. Based on this framework, we argue the scope of the agricultural literacy movement should be expanded to better account for more diverse sets of learners (e.g., adults), worldviews (e.g., local food production and consumption), and curricular models and settings (e.g., informal and nonformal).

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Published

2016-03-28

How to Cite

Mars, M. M., & Ball, A. L. (2016). Ways of Knowing, Sharing, and Translating Agricultural Knowledge and Perspectives: Alternative Epistemologies across Non-formal and Informal Settings. Journal of Agricultural Education, 57(1), 56–72. https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.2016.01056

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