Duffy Meghan A, Hammond J W, Cheng Susan J
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Office of Academic Innovation University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA.
School of Education University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Oct 28;9(22):12360-12373. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5736. eCollection 2019 Nov.
Climate change is one of the most pressing issues facing society today, yet a wide range of misconceptions exist in society about whether or why climate change is happening, what its consequences are, and what can be done to address it. Large introductory biology courses present an opportunity to teach a large number of students-some of whom may never take another course focused on climate, ecology, or the environment-about climate change. However, content knowledge alone may not be enough to prepare students to transform their knowledge into action. To begin understanding how content knowledge interacts with student constructions of climate change solutions, we administered and quantitatively analyzed a survey that examined student views of climate change and how they shifted with instruction during an undergraduate introductory biology course at a large Midwestern university. Almost all participants entered the course agreeing that climate change is occurring, and their certainty about the science of climate change increased after instruction. After taking the course, more participants described climate change as having more immediate impacts, reporting that climate change is already harming people and that climate change will harm them personally. However, both at the beginning and end of the course, participants tended to think that humans would either be unable or unwilling to reduce climate change. They were also more worried about climate change at the end of the course than they were before. Increased concern might result from students becoming more certain of the science and severity of climate change, while remaining pessimistic that humans will effectively act on climate change. This pattern suggests instructors have opportunities to modify curricula in ways that leave students with a greater sense of empowerment and efficacy; we suggest questions that instructors can ask themselves in order to modify their courses with this goal in mind.
气候变化是当今社会面临的最紧迫问题之一,然而社会上对于气候变化是否正在发生、为何发生、其后果是什么以及如何应对等问题存在广泛的误解。大型生物学入门课程为向大量学生传授气候变化知识提供了契机,其中一些学生可能再也不会参加另一门专注于气候、生态或环境的课程。然而,仅有知识内容可能不足以让学生将所学知识转化为行动。为了开始理解知识内容如何与学生构建的气候变化解决方案相互作用,我们在一所中西部大型大学的本科生物学入门课程中进行了一项调查,并对其进行了定量分析,该调查考察了学生对气候变化的看法以及这些看法在教学过程中的变化。几乎所有参与者在课程开始时都认同气候变化正在发生,并且在接受教学后他们对气候变化科学的确定性有所提高。修完这门课程后,更多参与者将气候变化描述为具有更直接的影响,报告称气候变化已经在危害人类,并且气候变化将对他们个人造成伤害。然而,在课程开始和结束时,参与者往往认为人类要么无法要么不愿意减少气候变化。他们在课程结束时也比之前更担心气候变化。担忧加剧可能是因为学生对气候变化的科学和严重性更加确定,同时对人类将有效应对气候变化仍持悲观态度。这种模式表明教师有机会以让学生更有掌控感和效能感的方式修改课程;我们提出了教师为了实现这一目标修改课程时可以自问的问题。