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The Three-Talk Model: Getting Both Evidence and Preferences into a Pre-Service Teacher Health Workshop

Author

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  • Albert Zeyer

    (Science Teacher Education, University of Teacher Education Lucerne, 6003 Luzerne, Switzerland)

  • Julia Arnold

    (Center for Science and Technology Didactics (ZNTD), University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, 4132 Muttenz, Switzerland)

Abstract

We describe a pre-service teacher workshop about sustainable health decisions in school. This one-week workshop had two goals: to improve the ability of students to cope with health and illness as teachers in daily school life, and to improve scientific literacy in health contexts. In this way, the workshop aimed at creating a situation of mutual benefit between science education and health education, as it is suggested in the new science pedagogy called Science|Environment|Health. To reach this aim, the workshop was structured by the evidence-preference approach and the three-talk model, both originally developed for shared-decision making in medicine. In the evidence-preference approach, the experts (the physician, here the teacher) provide the best evidence available, while the laypersons (the patient, here the teacher students) bring in their preferences and, together with the experts, find their personal standpoint. This process is structured by the three-talk model, which is conceived as a characteristic succession of choice talk, option talk, and decision talk. We describe how the pre-service teacher workshop embraced this new approach, compare it to a scientific literacy point of view, and suggest how it could be applied in many other educational contexts, particularly in many issues of education for sustainability.

Suggested Citation

  • Albert Zeyer & Julia Arnold, 2021. "The Three-Talk Model: Getting Both Evidence and Preferences into a Pre-Service Teacher Health Workshop," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(24), pages 1-13, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:13:y:2021:i:24:p:13937-:d:704302
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    Cited by:

    1. Albert Zeyer, 2022. "Teaching Two-Eyed Seeing in Education for Sustainable Development: Inspirations from the Science|Environment|Health Pedagogy in Pandemic Times," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(10), pages 1-12, May.

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