4.0 Article

Impact of Educational Gardens and Workshop Activities on 8th-Grade Student's Perception and Knowledge of Plant Biology

Journal

EDUCATION SCIENCES
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/educsci12090619

Keywords

educational gardens; environmental education; native flora; invasive species; plant biodiversity

Funding

  1. Pais com a Ciencia Program, of the Agency Ciencia Viva-Agencia Nacional para a Cultura Cientifica e Tecnologica
  2. Fundacao Ilidio Pinho, Porto, Portugal
  3. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT/MCTES) [CEECIND/00399/2017/CP1423/CT0004]
  4. NORTE 2020 through FEDER [NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000007]
  5. program contract FCTUMINHO/Norma transitoria from the Legal Regime of Scientific Employment (RJEC)
  6. CONFAP (Confederacao Nacional das Associacoes de Pais)
  7. [UID/BIA/04050/2020]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Educational gardens are important resources for promoting environmental education and engaging students and the public. This study aimed to enhance students' knowledge and awareness of plant-related topics through a hands-on intervention program implemented with the establishment of educational gardens on school grounds. The results showed that the program was effective in raising students' knowledge and awareness of native flora.
Educational gardens can be a significant resource in the promotion of environmental education, engaging both the school population and the general public. The main goal of the present study was to implement and assess a hands-on interventional program to promote knowledge and awareness of plant-related topics at a basic school level. We report on a hands-on educational project implemented with 8th-grade Portuguese students (mostly 13-14 years of age), associated with the establishment, on school grounds, of three educational gardens representing distinct Portuguese ecosystems. This was a collaborative project and encompassed several activities and subjects, including garden creation, plant propagation and plant care, plant identification, the study of form-function relationships, and lectures by plant researchers. A survey instrument with pre- and post-test assessments demonstrated the effectiveness of the program in raising student knowledge and awareness on topics centered around the native flora. Specifically, we noted that scores increased in all questions addressing different plant biology-related topics in the post-test assessment. This study supports the benefits of incorporating field/laboratory work and educational gardens in educational programs geared toward plant-oriented environmental education.

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