Publication Date
4-1-2016
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Sustainability Education
Volume
11
Abstract
Formal classroom learning experiences that support sustainable behaviors outside the classroom necessarily must bridge students’ home and school lives, as knowledge and practice learned in the classroom is implemented outside of school. To this end, we study the impact of the Green Ninja Energy Tracker curriculum, which uses students’ home energy data in the classroom to promote engagement in climate change and conservation behaviors. Data is drawn from class observations, a focus group, and pre- and post- surveys of a pilot implementation of this curriculum in a diverse 12th-grade Earth Science classroom at an alternative school. We investigate what factors contributed to student engagement in learning about and participating in energy conservation behaviors. We found that students were engaged by the immediacy of tracking their energy use in near-real time, and were motivated by the economic benefits experienced as a direct result of changing their behaviors. In addition, students reported discussing and problem-solving energy use with their families, and surfaced considerations that informed which energy behaviors were implemented and why. Students also reported high levels of personal agency in taking action on climate change, but were pessimistic about the likelihood of society as a whole taking action. We suggest that this pilot demonstrates the potential power of connecting the varied places of students’ experience by bridging home and school lives through energy tracker software as a catalyst for developing scientific expertise and engagement, and supporting energy conservation behaviors.
Keywords
Energy education, climate change, engagement, behavior change
Department
Meteorology and Climate Science
Recommended Citation
Elizabeth M. Walsh, Derek Jenkins, and Eugene Cordero. "The Promise of an Energy Tracker Curriculum for Promoting Home-School Connections and Youth Agency in Climate Action" Journal of Sustainability Education (2016).
Included in
Environmental Education Commons, Science and Mathematics Education Commons, Sustainability Commons
Comments
This is the Version of Record and can also be read online here.