Investigating Best Practices of Conservation Education for the African Wildlife Foundation

dc.contributor.advisor

George, Pamela

dc.contributor.author

Sarikas, Christine

dc.contributor.author

May, Katlyn

dc.contributor.author

Kleinbort, Tori

dc.date.accessioned

2014-04-18T02:48:16Z

dc.date.available

2014-04-18T02:48:16Z

dc.date.issued

2014-04-17

dc.department

Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences

dc.description.abstract

Effective conservation education has the ability to improve educational opportunities and expand environmental support in places where it is implemented. The African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) was founded in 1961 to promote wildlife conservation, land and habitat protection, community empowerment, and economic development across Africa (AWF, 2012). Until recently, AWF had not ventured into the formal education realm and, while they do not currently own or operate schools of their own, the organization is working to develop conservation education curricula to help support its mission. AWF will construct new schools and improve the infrastructure of existing schools to create effective learning environments for conservation topics. This study seeks to provide AWF with expert opinions and related curricular developments to help support their efforts at improving conservation education in Sub-Saharan Africa. A review of relevant literature focusing on the successful development and implementation of conservation education curricula was conducted and analyzed. Live interviews were conducted to obtain views from conservation education experts around the world. Nineteen interviews were conducted in total. These interviews provide expert opinions on environmental education, particularly conservation, in developing nations. Additionally, these interviews highlight existing environmental and conservation education curricula that contemporary experts identify as exemplary, and they include advice and guidance from experts within the education field. Qualitative analyses of these interviews were conducted using NVivo 10 software. Recommendations to AWF were developed based on the information reviewed throughout this process. The research shows that an emphasis on teacher capacity, community involvement, local context of curriculum, long-term project goals, and local relevance must be given significant consideration during curriculum development and implementation in order to maximize the probability of success.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/8442

dc.subject

Environmental education

dc.subject

Africa

dc.subject

NVivo

dc.subject

International development

dc.subject

Conservation

dc.subject

curricula

dc.title

Investigating Best Practices of Conservation Education for the African Wildlife Foundation

dc.type

Master's project

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
MP Final 2014.pdf
Size:
4.16 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description: