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Environmental Education in the 21st Century

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Title: Environmental Education in the 21st Century


1
Environmental Education in the 21st Century
Pfirman et al., Chronicle Feb 11, 2005
  • Background material for CEDD Session
  • May 21, 2009
  • Stephanie Pfirman, Barnard College

2
Educational trends
3
LEAP Proportion of employers who say colleges
and universities should place more emphasis than
they do today on
http//www.aacu.org/LEAP/index.cfm
4
Pedagogy for the 21st Century
  • Learner at the center
  • Multiple learning styles
  • Adapts education to learning needs of each
    individual
  • Repertoire of teaching strategies and skills
  • Traditional education systems fostered the
    obedience demanded of the manufacturing workforce
  • Future education must nurture creative and
    collaborative skills. Knowledge available at the
    click of a mouse -- learning to apply it requires
    teachers who instruct, facilitate, guide, and
    support

Equipping Every Learner for the 21st Century,
2008Developed by the Centre for Strategic
Education, Cisco Systems, Inc., and McKinsey
Company
5
Pedagogy for the 21st Century, continued
  • 3. Interdisciplinary and project-based work
  • In complex areas, learn how to draw on multiple
    disciplines and recognize interdependence
  • Working in teams, link between 21st century
    skills and the pedagogy used to impart them
  • 4. Authenticity
  • Appeal to existing interests
  • Integrate real-life experiences into lessons
    students do not just make an architectural
    drawing, they actually build a structure on the
    school lawn.
  • Learning that extends beyond the classroom into
    the community, the wilderness, the workplace, and
    the virtual world

Equipping Every Learner for the 21st Century,
2008Developed by the Centre for Strategic
Education, Cisco Systems, Inc., and McKinsey
Company
6
Pedagogy for the 21st Century, continued
  • 3. Interdisciplinary and project-based work
  • In complex areas, learn how to draw on multiple
    disciplines and recognize interdependence
  • Working in teams, link between 21st century
    skills and the pedagogy used to impart them
  • 4. Authenticity
  • Appeal to existing interests
  • Integrate real-life experiences into lessons
    students do not just make an architectural
    drawing, they actually build a structure on the
    school lawn.
  • Learning that extends beyond the classroom into
    the community, the wilderness, the workplace, and
    the virtual world

Equipping Every Learner for the 21st Century,
2008Developed by the Centre for Strategic
Education, Cisco Systems, Inc., and McKinsey
Company
7
Environment Moving Beyond Earth Systems
Science
Presented by Tim Killeen, NSF AD for Geoscience,
CEDD winter meeting, 2008
8
Growth in Environment/Sustainability/
Sustainable Development How has environmental
student enrollment changed over the past five
years?Vincent and Focht (CEDD Curriculum Study,
in prep.)
9
Potential for New Environmental Masters Degrees
Shukla and Freeman
10
Environmental Alumni
  • Results from Harvard/CEDD Pilot Survey

11
When did you decide to pursue an Environmental /
Natural Resources degree?
Shukla and Freeman The Alumni Career Survey
--National Bureau of Economic Research, Harvard
Science and Engineering Workforce Project
(http//www.nber.org/sewp/), Council of
Environmental Deans and Directors. Phase I of
survey administered by 15 schools to their alumni
from the class of 2005, 157 responses, Response
rate 27
12
What was the primary reason you decided to enter
an Environmental / Natural Resources program in
college?
www.sierraclub.org/grassroots/stories/00025.asp
13
Employment
Shukla and Freeman
14
Career Choice
Shukla and Freeman
15
In college, who gave you the most VALUABLE
advice about potential career options?
New Green Economy NCSE January 2010
Shukla and Freeman, CEDD/Harvard Alumni Pilot
16
Interdisciplinary Student Advising
  • Students in interdisciplinary programs tend to be
    less well served than students in departments
  • Advisors with dual affiliations are more
    comfortable advising about courses and careers in
    their own disciplines
  • This is especially unfortunate given that women
    and minorities appear to be disproportionately
    attracted to these programs (Jill Schneiderman,
    Vassar)
  • Institutions have a responsibility to provide
    them with more advising and career services than
    is standard for other departments, and to support
    that advising through increased staffing (Hempel
    and Pfirman, program review)

17
Curricular Content
  • CEDD Curricula Survey

18
CEDD Survey of U.S. Environmental Programs
Curriculum Models and Core Competency Areas
  • Identified 840 programs at 652 institutions
    awarding 1183 degrees
  • Response rate 31 - 260 programs at 238
    institutions awarding 343 degrees
  • 73 baccalaureate
  • 20 masters
  • 7 doctoral
  • Sample representative in Carnegie Class, census
    region/division, program type (level, name)

Distribution of Institutions with Environmental
Programs
19
CEDD Curriculum SurveyVincent and Focht (2009)
  • Cluster analysis discovered three clusters for
    both undergraduate programs and graduate
    programs
  • 1) a natural science focused cluster
  • 2) a social science and humanities focused
    cluster
  • 3) an interdisciplinary, problem-solver cluster
  • These undergraduate programs had higher
    percentage of growth than those in the natural
    science focused cluster

A total of 260 program leaders at 238
institutions participated in the survey for a
response rate of 31. They provided information
on 343 degree programs (69 named Environmental
Sciences or Environmental Studies).
20
Vincent and Focht (2009) Ranked Consensus
Factors for Undergraduate Degree Programs
  • Knowledge
  • social sciences and humanities,
  • (2) sustainability, applied sciences and
    management,
  • (3) interdisciplinary understanding
  • (4) life sciences
  • (5) physical sciences
  • Skills
  • (1) management skills
  • (2) technical research and communication skills
  • (3) cognitive skills
  • (4) social research and communication skills
  • (5) decision-making skills

21
CEDD Environmental Curriculum Study Survey
Findings Relevant to Sustainability Shirley
Vincent and Will Focht
  • ca. 30 of all ID environmental degree programs
    consider sustainability a core principle in their
    curricula
  • gt 50 include sustainability concepts in required
    coursework
  • -----
  • 86 rate the importance of sustainability in
    program curricula as modest to high

Vincent, S, and Focht, W. (2009) US Higher
Education Environmental Program Managers
Perspectives on Curriculum Design and Core
Competencies Implications for Sustainability as
a Guiding Framework, International Journal of
Sustainability in Higher Education (in press).
22
Sustainability/Climate
  • November 2007, 6,000 students traveled across the
    country to participate in the three day Power
    Shift Conference outside Washington, DC, to learn
    about global warming and to lobby Congress
  • 10,000 are expected in 2009
  • Undergraduate environmental programs that include
    sustainability report higher rates of growth over
    the past 5 years (ca. 238 institutions)
  • Vincent and Focht (CEDD Curriculum Survey)

http//sierraclub.typepad.com/scrapbook/2007/11/po
wer-shift-200.html
23
(No Transcript)
24
Academic Preparation
Shukla and Freeman
25
Curricular structure
26
Beyond Earth Systems Science
Presented by Tim Killeen, NSF AD for Geoscience,
CEDD winter meeting, 2008
27
(No Transcript)
28
How to Develop Expertise?
  • Measuring researcher interdisciplinarity
  • Alan L. Porter, Alex S. Cohen, David Roessner and
    Marty Perreault, 2007, Scientometrics

29
Importance of Capstone Experience
  • I guess, I just wanted to see what you are up to,
    and also to thank you because as I look back to
    Barnard, one of the memories that come up in my
    mind most often is all the classes that I took
    for the Environmental Science major, and even
    writing my thesis...(which I must admit, back
    then, I could not understand the purpose of
    writing one, but now as I look back... I realize
    that a lot of the projects that I am working on
    now resemble small theses... the research, the
    timing, the developing of the ideas... the
    editing and the collection of all thoughts into
    one small project...)." January, 1999.
  • This student graduated in 1997 and last we knew
    was working as a Sr. Statistical Analyst for an
    Investors Service

30
Academic home
31
Environmental Program AnalysisBarnard, Bates,
Bowdoin, Colby, Colgate, Colorado College, Hobart
William Smith, Lewis Clark, Middlebury, Mount
Holyoke, Whitman
  • Common Directions
  • Local environmental engagement and service
    learning
  • Interdisciplinary student research
  • Building community
  • Common spaces and resources connecting via GIS
  • Campus greening programming

Jill Bubier (Mt. Holyoke) and students at a
wetland research site in New Hampshire Photo by
Ralph Morang
EST May 2005 Pfirman, Hall, Tietenberg PKAL
2005 Hall, Tietenberg and Pfirman
32
Common Challenges
  • Staffing courses
  • Cross-departmental commitments
  • Team teaching
  • Staffing activities
  • Balancing education and scholarship
  • Program management
  • Service learning
  • Campus greening
  • Student internships
  • Diversity
  • Faculty
  • Students
  • Junior people (women) in difficult positions

EST May 2005 Pfirman, Hall, Tietenberg PKAL
2005 Hall, Tietenberg and Pfirman
33
Recommendations from Mellon Review
  • Institutions should take responsibility for
    interdisciplinary programs, students and faculty
  • Invest in community building (on campus and off)
  • Incentives and rewards for cross-departmental
    contributions
  • Staff programs
  • Institutionalize faculty career path

EST May 2005 Pfirman, Hall, Tietenberg PKAL
2005 Hall, Tietenberg and Pfirman
34
Spectrum of Interdisciplinary Involvement
35
interdisciplinary faculty
Pfirman et al., Chronicle Feb 11, 2005
36
Stereotypes of Disciplinary vs. Collaborative,
Interdisciplinary Students/Scholars?
  • Disciplinary
  • Quantitative
  • Tough
  • Self-driven
  • Independent
  • Assertive
  • Self-promoting, take credit for successes
  • Careerist
  • Risky science within the mainstream/consensus
    science
  • Focused, task oriented
  • Quick to publish, get ideas out
  • Productive
  • Competitive
  • Command-and-control leadership (e.g. lab
    hierarchy)
  • Collaborative, Interdisciplinary
  • Relational, qualitative
  • Friendly, nice
  • Concerned about others and their welfare
  • Helping
  • Socially sensitive, listening
  • Communal
  • Less careerist
  • Interdisciplinary science
  • Multitasking
  • Synthetic
  • Not competitive
  • Consensus oriented, democratic leadership

37
Different Approaches to Interdisciplinary
Research and Education
Rhoten and Pfirman, 2007a,b
38
Support Multiple Levels of ID Res Ed
New directions sabbaticals Course
development Multiple authors,
PIs Co-teaching Centers Joint majors, linked
courses Research practice, applications Civic
engagement
Intrapersonal Cognitive Connections
Interpersonal Collegial Connections
Inter-departmental Cross-field Connections
Stakeholder Community Connections
38
Rhoten and Pfirman, 2007a,b
39
Convene Around Complex ProblemsEngage faculty
through the affective as well as cognitive realm
  • Seminars/Workshops
  • MacGregor workshop
  • One book -- Chandler-Gilbert Community
    College
  • Global Learning -- Whitman
  • Field experiences
  • River Summer -- Pfirman, Kenna, Barnard/Lamont/
    Environmental Consortium of Hudson Valley
    Colleges and Universities

40
Recognize Initiative and Reward Success
  • Everyone wants to others to recognize their
    significance
  • Citations, Book reviews, Fellows of Professional
    Societies
  • Create campus awards for env. teaching and
    research

Who will deliver on Americas Promise The Future
Professoriate W. Plater, J. Schuster, J. Gappa,
AACU Seattle 2009
41
Make Time Faster Better Teaching?
  • Use the entire campus that fact that faculty
    and students are together
  • Link engineering, economics, psychology, geology,
    ethics, business, policy, public health
  • Align curricula with learning goals
  • Minors/Concentrations/Masters
  • Sustainable Development (Columbia)
  • Entrepreneurship (Trinity)
  • Leadership (Barnard)
  • Innovative pedagogy
  • Social networking as a learning tool?

42
Potential of New Approaches to EducationHere
Comes EverybodyThe Power of Organizing without
Organizations Clay Shirky, 2008
  • Most of the barriers to group action have
    collapsed, and without those barriers, we are
    free to explore new ways of gathering together
    and getting things done.
  • When a real once-in-a-lifetime change comes
    along we with the experience are at risk of
    regarding it as a fad.
  • young people are taking better advantage of
    social tools , extending their capabilities in
    ways that violate old models

43
Looking ahead
  • Students
  • Develop student capacity to meet the needs of the
    global community adopt Pedagogy for the 21st
    Century?
  • Connect to entrepreneurship?
  • Agencies/business
  • May be getting ahead of us?
  • Faculty
  • Need to catch up
  • Develop the will, capacity, incentives, and
    administrative support for faculty to change and
    then take changes to scale
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