This chapter intends to participate in the debate on teaching inequality, particularly in response to the following question: Which methodologies are appropriate for developing a reflection on inequalities in schools? This chapter aimed to answer this question using a case study methodology. The case under analysis concerns the experimentation of a training course on food poverty and the right to food, addressed at schools of all levels in the province of Reggio Emilia during the 2015/2016 school year. This example is interesting for several reasons. We address the issue of inequalities, concretize them, and propose a perspective that moves from global to local, underlining the strong connection between these two dimensions. It is directly linked to the SDGs and links them directly to the lifestyle and consumption style of young people. Proposed action-oriented awareness raising and places a person in connection with the community and environment. It took place with nonformal learning methodologies, but inside the school, involving different age groups. The analyzed experience is therefore of particular interest and can provide useful suggestions for a curriculum and methodology for inequalities.
Gollini, A., Food for All: Analysis of a Case of Nonformal Education on Inequalities in Public School, The Palgrave Handbook of Global Social Change., Spirger Nature, Heidelberg 2024 2024: 1-20. 10.1007/978-3-030-87624-1_435-1 [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/298896]
Food for All: Analysis of a Case of Nonformal Education on Inequalities in Public School
Gollini, Andrea
Primo
2024
Abstract
This chapter intends to participate in the debate on teaching inequality, particularly in response to the following question: Which methodologies are appropriate for developing a reflection on inequalities in schools? This chapter aimed to answer this question using a case study methodology. The case under analysis concerns the experimentation of a training course on food poverty and the right to food, addressed at schools of all levels in the province of Reggio Emilia during the 2015/2016 school year. This example is interesting for several reasons. We address the issue of inequalities, concretize them, and propose a perspective that moves from global to local, underlining the strong connection between these two dimensions. It is directly linked to the SDGs and links them directly to the lifestyle and consumption style of young people. Proposed action-oriented awareness raising and places a person in connection with the community and environment. It took place with nonformal learning methodologies, but inside the school, involving different age groups. The analyzed experience is therefore of particular interest and can provide useful suggestions for a curriculum and methodology for inequalities.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.