An Assessment of the Efficacy of an Experiential Component within a Classroom-based Middle School Environmental Education Curriculum

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2007-04

Type of Work

Department

Hood College Biology

Program

Biomedical and Environmental Science

Citation of Original Publication

Rights

Subjects

Abstract

In this study the author sought to examine the effectiveness of experiential environmental education in a sixth grade classroom. Classroom instruction was provided to a control group and an experiential component was added to classroom instruction for an experimental group. A test of the author's design was used as a pretest and post test. The post test was given twice: At the conclusion of instruction and at 6 months. Using a Paired Student's t test, differences were determined between the test scores for both groups. Only the experimental group had a statistically significant score increase between the pretest and first post test. However, at the six month post test the increase disappeared. Further studies are needed to determine the long-term effectiveness of discrete instructional units of environmental education and efforts should be made to incorporate environmental education across the K-12 curriculum in order to promote the development of responsible environmental behaviors.