Table Of ContentEducation and Development in Rural Appalachia: An Environmental Education 
Perspective 
 
 
 
 
 
A dissertation presented to 
the faculty of 
The Gladys W. and David H. Patton College of Education and Human Services  
of Ohio University 
 
In partial fulfillment 
of the requirements for the degree 
Doctor of Philosophy 
 
 
 
 
 
James R. Addington 
March 2011 
© 2011 James R. Addington. All Rights Reserved.
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This dissertation titled 
Education and Development in Rural Appalachia: An Environmental Education 
Perspective 
 
by 
JAMES R. ADDINGTON 
 
has been approved for 
the Department of Educational Studies 
and The Gladys W. and David H. Patton College of Education and Human Services by 
 
 
 
Francis E. Godwyll 
Assistant Professor of Educational Studies 
 
 
 
Renée A. Middleton 
Dean, The Gladys W. and David H. Patton College of Education and Human Services
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Abstract 
ADDINGTON, JAMES R., Ph.D., March 2011, Curriculum and Instruction, Cultural 
Studies  
Education and Development in Rural Appalachia: An Environmental Education 
Perspective (187 pp.) 
Director of Dissertation: Francis E. Godwyll 
  This study examines education and development in Appalachia using 
environmental education as the theoretical basis. Despite over 50 years of public attention 
to the educational and developmental disparities in the Central Appalachian region, these 
disparities still exist. Thus, the investigation into a new paradigm seems appropriate 
(Eller, 2008).  The overarching research question seeks to explore whether a sustainable 
Appalachian perspective can serve to anchor an educational and developmental system 
that meets the needs of the Appalachian people.  This study adopted a naturalistic 
qualitative approach. Naturalistic inquiry studies real-world situations as they unfold 
naturally; it also lacks predetermined constraints on outcomes and is characterized by 
openness to whatever emerges (Patton, 1990; Lincoln & Guba, 1985).  The main source 
of data was through interviews of seven participants through purposeful sampling of 
information rich individuals.  
The findings of the study show that the development of a sustainable economy in 
Appalachia could produce a more affluent and environmentally just life for the region’s 
residents and represents a new paradigm. The findings point out that a sustainable
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economy in Appalachia must include an agricultural component and that food production 
and food security is tied to regional ideas of place and identity. 
    Environmental education is seen as a foundation of this development.  Finally, 
the development of a sustainable economy must come from the grassroots, and the 
development of a mechanism to tie together the constructs of economic empowerment, 
education, environmental, and ecological justice in a coherent and practical way.  The 
study indicates that Environmental Education can be the mechanism that serves that 
purpose as it contains all those constructs.  I would contend that Appalachia is not unique 
in this, but that all culture is based in place and that environmental education methods are 
apropos for education and development methods.  The broader application of these 
conclusions is that communities that express themselves largely through indigenous 
worldviews should confront the world and their developmental priorities using paradigms 
that align with environmental education.      
  
Approved: _____________________________________________________________ 
Francis E. Godwyll 
Assistant Professor of Educational Studies
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Dedication 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I wish to dedicate this work to the following people: 
Ann Addington, my loving and supportive spouse 
Lucille Alley Maple, my mother for her unfailing faith 
Wells, Lauren, and Jenna, my children for their unqualified love
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Acknowledgments 
  I wish to acknowledge first my chairperson, Dr. Francis Godwyll for his 
assistance from the beginning to the end of the dissertation process. I also wish to thank 
the following committee members for their support and assistance in the process, Dr. 
Jerry Johnson, Dr. Sharon Denham, Jack Wright, MFA and Dean Richard Greenlee. 
Additionally I would like to thank The Gladys W. and David H. Patton College of 
Education and Human Services, South East Ohio ABLE, and Coalition of Ohio 
Appalachian Center for Higher Education (OACHE), for their financial support in my
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Table of Contents 
Page 
Abstract................................................................................................................................3
Dedication............................................................................................................................5
!
Acknowledgments...............................................................................................................6
!
List of Tables.......................................................................................................................9
!
List of Figures....................................................................................................................10
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Chapter One: Introduction.................................................................................................11
!
Background to the Study...............................................................................................11
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Statement of the Problem..............................................................................................17
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Research Questions........................................................................................................18
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Purpose of the Study......................................................................................................19
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Significance...................................................................................................................19
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Delimitations.................................................................................................................20
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Definitions of Terms......................................................................................................20
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Chapter Two: Literature Review.......................................................................................22
!
Introduction...................................................................................................................22
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Appalachia and its Culture............................................................................................22
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Contrasting Cultures..................................................................................................25
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Education in Appalachia................................................................................................26
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Background................................................................................................................26
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Barriers to Education.................................................................................................30
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Support for Education by the Inhabitants of Appalachia...........................................33
!
Expectations in Appalachia for Students Today........................................................36
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Education Attainment in Appalachia.........................................................................38
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Appalachian Studies..................................................................................................40
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Theoretical Framework..................................................................................................43
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Environmental Education..........................................................................................43
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Environmental Education and Place..........................................................................53
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Chapter Three: Methodology.............................................................................................57
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Design........................................................................................................................57
!
!
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Site Selection.................................................................................................................57
Participant Selection......................................................................................................59
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Data Collection Procedure.............................................................................................59
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Methods and Approaches..............................................................................................61
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The Researcher..............................................................................................................63
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Analyses and Interpretation of Data..............................................................................64
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Reflections from the Field.............................................................................................65
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Chapter Four: Analysis of Data.........................................................................................67
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Introduction...................................................................................................................67
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Appalachian Culture......................................................................................................68
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Summation.................................................................................................................73
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Appalachian Studies......................................................................................................74
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Summation.................................................................................................................83
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Sense of Place in Appalachia.........................................................................................84
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Summation.................................................................................................................91
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Environmental Education..............................................................................................91
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Summation...............................................................................................................103
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Environmental Justice..................................................................................................103
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Summation...............................................................................................................111
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Development in Appalachia........................................................................................111
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Summation...............................................................................................................122
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Sustainability...............................................................................................................123
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Summation...............................................................................................................140
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Cross-case Analysis.....................................................................................................140
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Summation...................................................................................................................151
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Chapter Five: Summary, Implications, and Conclusions................................................153
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Summary of Chapters..................................................................................................153
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Implications.................................................................................................................171
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Conclusions.................................................................................................................172
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References...................................................................................................................174
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Appendix A..................................................................................................................186
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List of Tables 
  Page 
Table1 Cross Case Analysis............................................................................................143
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List of Figures 
  Page 
Figure 1: ARC Designated Appalachian Region ...........................................................59 
Figure 2: Environmental Education .............................................................................145 
Figure 3: Interconnection .............................................................................................146 
Figure 4: Social Justice ................................................................................................147 
Figure 5: Eco Environment ..........................................................................................148 
Figure 6: Personal Environment ..................................................................................150 
Figure 7: Natural vs. built envir nments .....................................................................152 
o
Figure 8: Diagrammatic Representation of Postmodern Economy Model ..................165 
Figure 9: Diagrammatic Representation of Sustainable Economic Model .................166 
Figure 10: Symbology of Panarchy .............................................................................169
Description:Environmental education is seen as a foundation of this development.  education, environmental, and ecological justice in a coherent and practical  culture they might begin to affect the local political and sociological entities.