Although child-centred approaches are increasingly adopted in disaster risk reduction (DRR) education, cultural heritage remains largely absent from pedagogical models addressing risk, agency, and community belonging. This study explores how heritage-based experiential learning can support young children’s cognitive, emotional, and civic development in DRR contexts. A qualitative intrinsic case study was conducted with 18 pupils (ages 8–9) in a primary school in Ravenna, Italy, through a four-session intervention grounded in Learning-by-Doing and Play-Based Learning. Activities included risk identification games, tableaux vivants, archaeological puzzles, and a simulated triage of heritage objects. Data from structured observations, teacher notes, children’s artefacts, and feedback discussions were analysed through qualitative content analysis. Findings indicate that experiential, embodied, and collaborative tasks facilitated children’s understanding of risk, promoted metacognitive reflection, and nurtured an emerging sense of responsibility toward cultural heritage. Heritage provided a meaningful learning context that supported emotional engagement, sense-making, and early civic agency. The study highlights the pedagogical value of integrating cultural heritage into DRR education and suggests avenues for extending holistic, community-relevant learning in early childhood.

Fiorentino, S., Casarotto, A., Falbo, I., Sigismondo, G., Vandini, M. (2026). Learning to Care: Exploring the Missing Intersection Between Cultural Heritage and Risk Education in Childhood. EDUCATION SCIENCES, 16(3), 382-393 [10.3390/educsci16030382].

Learning to Care: Exploring the Missing Intersection Between Cultural Heritage and Risk Education in Childhood

Sara Fiorentino
Primo
Conceptualization
;
Anna Casarotto
Secondo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
Ilenia Falbo
Data Curation
;
Giacomo Sigismondo
Data Curation
;
Mariangela Vandini
Supervision
2026

Abstract

Although child-centred approaches are increasingly adopted in disaster risk reduction (DRR) education, cultural heritage remains largely absent from pedagogical models addressing risk, agency, and community belonging. This study explores how heritage-based experiential learning can support young children’s cognitive, emotional, and civic development in DRR contexts. A qualitative intrinsic case study was conducted with 18 pupils (ages 8–9) in a primary school in Ravenna, Italy, through a four-session intervention grounded in Learning-by-Doing and Play-Based Learning. Activities included risk identification games, tableaux vivants, archaeological puzzles, and a simulated triage of heritage objects. Data from structured observations, teacher notes, children’s artefacts, and feedback discussions were analysed through qualitative content analysis. Findings indicate that experiential, embodied, and collaborative tasks facilitated children’s understanding of risk, promoted metacognitive reflection, and nurtured an emerging sense of responsibility toward cultural heritage. Heritage provided a meaningful learning context that supported emotional engagement, sense-making, and early civic agency. The study highlights the pedagogical value of integrating cultural heritage into DRR education and suggests avenues for extending holistic, community-relevant learning in early childhood.
2026
Fiorentino, S., Casarotto, A., Falbo, I., Sigismondo, G., Vandini, M. (2026). Learning to Care: Exploring the Missing Intersection Between Cultural Heritage and Risk Education in Childhood. EDUCATION SCIENCES, 16(3), 382-393 [10.3390/educsci16030382].
Fiorentino, Sara; Casarotto, Anna; Falbo, Ilenia; Sigismondo, Giacomo; Vandini, Mariangela
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/1052993
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