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A survey of the environmental education of students in non‐environmental majors at four‐year institutions in the USA

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TLDR
In a survey of 496 chief academic officers at four-year institutions in the USA as mentioned in this paper, 11.6 percent indicated that an environmental literacy course was required of all students, and 55.0 percent reported that such a course was available and countable toward the institution's general education requirements.
Abstract
Chief academic officers at four‐year institutions in the USA were surveyed electronically to examine the extent to which these institutions provide for the environmental education of students in non‐environmental majors, and to identify various approaches to increasing environmental literacy at the college level. Of the 496 responding institutions (representing a 42.3 percent response rate), 11.6 percent indicated that an “environmental literacy” course was required of all students, and 55.0 percent reported that such a course was available and countable toward the institution’s general education requirements. At least one “environmental” minor (e.g. Environmental Science, Environmental Studies) was offered at 33.7 percent of the institutions; 39 percent reported the existence of an “environmental” academic program that offered a course appropriate for non‐majors. Discusses various approaches to achieving environmental literacy at the college level and statistical differences in survey responses among Carnegie classifications, from Research to Baccalaureate; between public and private institutions; and among geographical regions.

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Sustainability in tertiary curricula: what is stopping it happening?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify key issues and look into the current experience associated with implementation approaches to implement sustainability education in Australian tertiary institutions. But despite the apparent widespread support for the concept of student education in sustainability, there is little implementation.
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The implementation of environmental management towards sustainable universities and education for sustainable development as an ethical imperative

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Many roads lead to sustainability: a process‐oriented analysis of change in higher education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse activities to integrate sustainability in teaching, research and operational practice in different higher education institutions, which differ both in the degree of how far implementation goes and in regards to the most active stakeholders.
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How Environmental Knowledge Measures up at a Big Ten University.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the level of environmental knowledge of Michigan State University students relative to the results of a biannual national study of the environmental knowledge in the general population of the United States.
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Sustainability behaviors among college students: an application of the VBN theory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined what socio-psychological factors influence sustainability behaviors among university students and found that those who adhere to biospheric and altruistic values were more likely to engage in a range of sustainability behaviors whereas those that adhere to egoistic values are less like.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of an Environmental Studies Course on Selected Variables Related to Environmentally Responsible Behavior

TL;DR: This article found that students completing an environmental studies course displayed statistically significant gains, that is, a more internally oriented LOCR for ERB, a higher perception of their knowledge of and skill in using categories of environmentally responsible behavior, and a higher degree of self-report of participation in ERB than did students not completing such a course.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does an Environmental Course in the Business School Make a Difference

TL;DR: This paper found that after a 10-week course in environmental management, students were more environmentally knowledgeable, expressed greater concern about the environment, and were more action oriented after the course than before the course.
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