4.5 Article

Green building literacy: a framework for advancing green building education

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40594-019-0171-6

Keywords

Green building literacy; Green building education; Environmental literacy; Science literacy; Curriculum design; Next generation science standards

Funding

  1. National Institute of Food and Agriculture federal agricultural experiment station capacity grants [MO-HANC0001]
  2. United States Department of Agriculture

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BackgroundDespite the increasing square footage of green buildings worldwide, green building expertise remains largely in the domain of building industry professionals. However, the performance of and advocacy for green buildings would benefit from a green building literate general public. Green building education is an expanding frontier for STEM education and can create opportunities to integrate science and environmental literacies into the study of everyday environments. Few resources exist, however, to help STEM educators incorporate green building themes into the science classroom. The work here developed educational tools for connecting green buildings and science education through a multi-step process. An interdisciplinary literature review yielded a series of frameworks that were improved through two focus groups with science and environmental educators and built environment professionals.ResultsThe result of this process is a toolbox of conceptual frameworks for educators interested in using a systems-based approach to teach about green buildings as sites for complex interactions between human activity and Earth systems. The work here first leverages the broad definition of environmental literacy (knowledge, skills, affect, and behavior) to advance a working definition for green building literacy. Next, major domains of green building knowledge are developed and linked to the Next Generation Science Standards.ConclusionsGreen building literacy has been an ill-defined term and green building themes have not been rigorously connected to science and environmental education. The work here provides a foundation for promoting green building literacy through K-12 STEM education. The educational tools developed through this process can be used as a starting point for lesson planning to catalyze green building education in a variety of formal and informal settings.

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