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Journal article

Development of Environmental Knowledge and Attitudes in Engineering Students

Abstract

A test was administered to 102 engineering students to ascertain how engineering education influences their environmental knowledge and attitudes. Answers to definitional and factual questions in a forced-answer section demonstrated that students were improving their technical knowledge, but responses to more subtle questions were mixed. Answers to attitudinal questions exhibited a trend towards increased environmental awareness. For open-ended questions, posttest results showed an increase in knowledge of engineering work. Over 80% of the students considered themselves to have a caring attitude toward the environment, with the “three R’s” and green transportation choices most commonly cited. Engagement in research, education, or advocacy doubled from pretest to posttest. Air pollution and solid waste disposal most frequently influenced students’ attitudes toward the environment. Outdoor experiences were the most frequently mentioned source of information; university courses rose from 4% to 15% on the posttest. Only 40% of the students could name an environmental role model.

Authors

Kennedy C; Hyde R; Karney B

Journal

Bulletin of Science Technology & Society, Vol. 22, No. 6, pp. 460–473

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

DOI

10.1177/0270467602238889

ISSN

0270-4676

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