A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes

© 2016 Treagust et al. Environmental education in schools is of increasing importance as the world population increases with the subsequent demand on resources and the potential for increased pollution. In an effort to enhance the standing of environmental education in the school curriculum, this st...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Treagust, David, Amarant, A., Chandrasegaran, Chandra, Won, Mihye
Format: Journal Article
Published: Look Academic Publishers 2016
Online Access:http://www.ijese.net/makale/725
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25276
_version_ 1848751663442034688
author Treagust, David
Amarant, A.
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
Won, Mihye
author_facet Treagust, David
Amarant, A.
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
Won, Mihye
author_sort Treagust, David
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2016 Treagust et al. Environmental education in schools is of increasing importance as the world population increases with the subsequent demand on resources and the potential for increased pollution. In an effort to enhance the standing of environmental education in the school curriculum, this study was designed to determine primary students’ knowledge about the environment, their attitudes towards helping the environment and what they actually have done to help the environment. The Year 4 and 5 students in regular and gifted classes in one primary school answered a questionnaire called the Children’s Environmental Attitude and Knowledge Scale (CHEAKS) and several students in both Year levels were interviewed in pairs to elaborate on their responses. In the interviews, students discussed what they had been taught in school in relation to the environment. The findings include (1) Year 4 students had a higher commitment to the environment than Year 5 students; (2) gifted students had more knowledge than regular students; and (3) girls were more verbally committed to the environment than boys. Having knowledge about the environment did not necessarily mean that the student was committed to saving the environment, nor did it mean that the student took action to solve environmental problems. While this study was conducted in one school, the implication is the need for the implementation of a curriculum to help students develop their knowledge and attitudes to take proenvironmental actions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:56:18Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-25276
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:56:18Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Look Academic Publishers
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-252762019-09-24T08:09:17Z A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes Treagust, David Amarant, A. Chandrasegaran, Chandra Won, Mihye © 2016 Treagust et al. Environmental education in schools is of increasing importance as the world population increases with the subsequent demand on resources and the potential for increased pollution. In an effort to enhance the standing of environmental education in the school curriculum, this study was designed to determine primary students’ knowledge about the environment, their attitudes towards helping the environment and what they actually have done to help the environment. The Year 4 and 5 students in regular and gifted classes in one primary school answered a questionnaire called the Children’s Environmental Attitude and Knowledge Scale (CHEAKS) and several students in both Year levels were interviewed in pairs to elaborate on their responses. In the interviews, students discussed what they had been taught in school in relation to the environment. The findings include (1) Year 4 students had a higher commitment to the environment than Year 5 students; (2) gifted students had more knowledge than regular students; and (3) girls were more verbally committed to the environment than boys. Having knowledge about the environment did not necessarily mean that the student was committed to saving the environment, nor did it mean that the student took action to solve environmental problems. While this study was conducted in one school, the implication is the need for the implementation of a curriculum to help students develop their knowledge and attitudes to take proenvironmental actions. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25276 http://www.ijese.net/makale/725 Look Academic Publishers fulltext
spellingShingle Treagust, David
Amarant, A.
Chandrasegaran, Chandra
Won, Mihye
A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title_full A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title_fullStr A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title_full_unstemmed A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title_short A case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: Reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
title_sort case for enhancing environmental education programs in schools: reflecting on primary school students’ knowledge and attitudes
url http://www.ijese.net/makale/725
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25276