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A citizen science approach to teaching climate change in introductory-level undergraduate general science courses

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posted on 2024-01-09, 21:00 authored by Isaac S. Rosenthal, Molly N. Simon, Laura Trouille, Jarrett E.K Byrnes

Hundreds of thousands of undergraduates enroll in general education science courses to fulfill university core requirements. However, many of these lecture-based courses fail to foster high-level data literacy skills. This work details the design, implementation, and analysis of a new climate change-based classroom activity for college students that pairs data interpretation with participation in an online citizen science project called Floating Forests (http://floatingforests.org). We pilot tested our activity in introductory geoscience and biology courses at six universities (∼1,500 students) during the 2020–2021 academic year. Additionally, we developed and validated a survey to assess how engagement with our activity impacted students’ self-reported changes across four factors: (1) perceptions of the impacts of climate change, (2) data literacy self-efficacy, (3) beliefs about the value of citizen science, and (4) beliefs about science engagement. In a pre- to post-test comparison, students who utilized our activity in their courses showed statistically significant increases (p < 0.05) across all four factors. These results highlight the potential benefit of implementing data-driven, citizen science-based activities in introductory-level undergraduate courses.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1821319.

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    Journal of Geoscience Education

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