Journal
SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13179663
Keywords
biodiversity conservation; environmental education; extinction of experience; nature relatedness
Funding
- Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [P19084, 20H04375]
- Toyota Foundation [D19-R-0102]
- Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20H04375] Funding Source: KAKEN
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As urbanization progresses, children are less likely to experience nature, which is seen as a crucial factor in halting environmental degradation. Schools play an important role in mitigating the extinction of experience. Teacher's nature-relatedness and ecological knowledge are key factors influencing the implementation of nature-based education in schools.
As society becomes increasingly urbanized, children are becoming much less likely to experience nature. This progressive disengagement from the natural world, often termed the 'extinction of experience', has been viewed both as a key public health issue and one of the most fundamental obstacles to halting global environmental degradation. School education has an important role in mitigating and reversing the ongoing extinction of experience. Here, we examine the role of several factors that determine the implementation intensities of nature-based education by science teachers in the classrooms of both primary and secondary schools. We performed a large-scale questionnaire survey comprising 363 elementary and 259 lower-secondary schoolteachers. Several factors predicted the implementation intensity of nature-based education in schools. The most important predictor was teachers' levels of nature-relatedness, with nature-orientated teachers being more likely to provide nature-based education in their classes. Levels of teachers' ecological knowledge, frequency of childhood nature experiences, and greenness within the school were also positively associated with the implementation intensity of education. Our results suggest that, to promote nature-based education in schools, it is important to increase schoolteachers' nature-relatedness and ecological knowledge, as well as to provide more green spaces within schools.
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