2015
DOI: 10.1071/wf13153
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Children’s knowledge of bushfire emergency response

Abstract: Abstract. In the aftermath of the Black Saturday bushfire disaster, the Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission recommended that bushfire education be made a formal part of the Australian national curriculum. Crucially, the success of any hazards education program depends on the degree to which the learner's existing knowledge and experience is accommodated in the education process. Yet accommodating children's knowledge in bushfire education is hampered by a lack of research on how children conceptualise bushfir… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…There is growing anecdotal evidence that when children are supported by adults and are provided with sufficient knowledge and skills, they can protect themselves, save others from danger, and promote significant changes in their communities to adapt to climate change and reduce the risk of disasters (Back et al, 2009;Haynes and Tanner, 2015;Mitchell et al, 2008;Tanner, 2010;Webb and Ronan, 2014;Wisner, 2006). Recent empirical research has provided further support for children's agency in this realm (Haynes and Tanner, 2015;Towers, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is growing anecdotal evidence that when children are supported by adults and are provided with sufficient knowledge and skills, they can protect themselves, save others from danger, and promote significant changes in their communities to adapt to climate change and reduce the risk of disasters (Back et al, 2009;Haynes and Tanner, 2015;Mitchell et al, 2008;Tanner, 2010;Webb and Ronan, 2014;Wisner, 2006). Recent empirical research has provided further support for children's agency in this realm (Haynes and Tanner, 2015;Towers, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, in line with the Sendai Framework for DRR (UNISDR, 2015), it is time to consider children as active agents in disaster scenarios and to prepare them with age-appropriate self-protective measures that allow them to respond safely and confidently in these situations. This could be done by creating a pilot wildfire resilience programme such as "Survive and Thrive" in Australia (Towers, Perillo, and Ronan 2018). This programme was targeted at primary school children and established partnerships between schools, local brigades and other emergency stakeholders for the delivery of specific contents through place-based experiential and student led inquiry-based approaches.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using the drawings and representations as prompts for discussions with the children, Walker and her colleagues were able to grasp that the impacts of the floods were not only special but also temporal and evolved over time, stressing the need to study children’s reactions to disasters in a processual, gradual form. Finally, Towers (2015) used the ‘draw and write’ technique to support focus group discussions with children to assess their knowledge of bushfire emergency responses. Based on their experiences with the Black Saturday bushfire disaster, Towers concluded that the children demonstrated a capacity to understand the fundamental principles of emergency response, despite revealing some misconceptions and gaps in their perceptions.…”
Section: Creative Art-based Methods and Drawingsmentioning
confidence: 99%