Learning Collective Worldmaking (LCW)

event

Roundtable on Relational Research Methods in the Face of Climate Crises

Tickets
image

May 26, 2025
8am–5pm Mountain Time
Hybrid


On-site Information

University of Alberta
Education South, Room 122


Online Information

A Zoom link will be sent to registrants

Overview

Mainstream education and education research is complicit in the ongoing climate crisis due to its foundations in Western extractivist modernity. Drawing on the work of Escobar (2018) in Designs for the Pluriverse, we recognize how research design—in keeping with other forms of design—has historically contributed to the very extractivist processes that have led to our current climate crisis, often eliding questions of class, gender, race, and coloniality through a universalizing impetus. Considering these realities, we see a need for education research to instead engage with relational ontologies defined by connection to land and nature, which may offer other ways of relating to and with land and one another.

Join a variety of scholars in discussing possibilities for relational educational research methods. We encourage participation for the full day, but attending individual sessions is also fine.

This event is supported by a SSHRC Insight Grant and hosted by Dr. Carrie Karsgaard at Cape Breton University and Dr. Lynette Shultz at the University of Alberta.

agenda

all times mountain time

8:00 am

doors open – registration

University of Alberta
Education South
Room 122

8:15 am – 8:30 am

welcome and coffee

Carrie Karsgaard, Cape Breton University

8:30 am – 9:10 am

session 1

“Another World is (Im)possible)”: The Neuro-Affective Turn and its Implications for Educational Research in the Context of the Climate Crisis

Audrey Bryan, Dublin City University

9:10 am – 9:50 am

session 2

Connecting Creative, Relational and Decolonial Methods in Climate Crisis Education

Su-Ming Khoo, University of Galway

9:50 am – 10:30 am

session 3

Deradicalizing Climate Denial: Gender, Education, and Climate Justice in the Global North

Joseph Henderson, University of Vermon
David Long, Morehead State University
Jonas Lysgaard, Aarhus University
Antti Rajala, University of Neuchâtel

10:30 am – 10:45 am

break

10:45 am – 11:25 am

session 4

Walking as Relational Research Method

Sheena Wilson, University of Alberta
Rachel Epp Buller, Bethel College

11:25 am – 12:05 p.m

session 5

Against Extractive Research: Collective Biography as a Method of Relation and Refusal

Iveta Silova, Arizona State University
Victoria Desimoni, Arizona State University
Dilraba Anayatova, Arizona State University

12:05 pm – 1:00 pm

lunch

1:00 pm – 1:40 pm

session 6

Green School Participatory Budgeting as Relational Democratic Praxis: Student Voice, Climate Action and Educational Transformation

Tara Bartlett, Arizona State University

1:40 pm – 2:20 pm

session 7

Relational Methodologies or Relatable Methods? Toward An Ecofeminist Research Practice

Rezvaneh Erfani, University of Alberta

2:20 pm – 2:35 pm

break

2:35 pm – 3:15 pm

session 8

Research as Solidarity in the Face of the Climate Crisis: A Presentation About Research for the Frontlines

Jen Gobby, Research for the Front Lines

3:15 pm – 4:30 pm

session 9

Curriculum as Cultural Work: Embedding Climate Justice Within Municipal Learning

Carol Bomfim, University of Alberta

Muskrats and River Lots: Relational Uses of Decolonial, Participatory, and Embodied Mapping

Danika Jorgensen-Skakum, University of Alberta

Beyond Mapping: AI-Driven GIS as a Relational Method in Climate Change Education

Noon Hussein, University of Alberta

4:30 pm – 5:00 pm

discussion & wrap-up

Carrie Karsgaard, Cape Breton University
Lynette Shultz, University of Alberta

Learning Collective Worldmaking

Unama’ki espi-kina’matno’kuom etek Mi’kma’ki, wla na no’kamanaq aq maqamikewminu mena’qiknmuetuk.

Cape Breton University is located in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaw People.

Questions?
Send us an email!