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The Role of Education in Shaping

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Title: The Role of Education in Shaping


1
  • The Role of Education in Shaping
  • Sustainable Energy Behaviours
  • A Seminar for CREE at the University of Bath
  • by
  • Andrew Darnton
  • 22nd March 2007

2
Background Objectives
  • AD an independent desk researcher including for
    Defra, WWF, EST
  • Today discussing two recent studies for EST (both
    as yet unpublished)
  • Research brief for Study One
  • Establish and review the current state of
    knowledge about the impact of education /
    awareness raising programmes on childrens
    long-term behaviour (ie. their behaviour as
    adults).
  • Research brief for Study Two
  • Explore...
  • i) Current and future role of schools in wider
    communities
  • ii) Implications for sustainable energy agenda,
    and for EST
  • iii) Likely impacts of school-community links on
    energy-related behaviour change

3
A Common Hypothesis
  • Study One identified a growing opportunity for
    encouraging sustainable energy behaviours via
    education, thanks to the Sustainable Schools
    agenda
  • Changing behaviourforms a large part of the
    Governments thinking on sustainable development.
    Education is one of the key ways by which
    Government expects to realise this cross-cutting
    goal.
  • Sustainable Schools Consultation Paper (May 2006)
  • Together, the studies aim to unpick this

4
Overview
  1. Research Methods
  2. Availability of Evidence
  3. Lessons from Behavioural Theory
  4. Lessons from Educational Theory
  5. Whole School Approaches
  6. Sustainable Schools
  7. Next Steps

5
ADs Methods
  • No common methodology/format for desk research
    (eg. MRS)
  • Desk research not academic literature review
  • Meeting new research objectives through
    existing evidence
  • Not a systematic method, but a synthesis of
    sources suggested by individuals best placed to
    judge (thus ideal for SD studies)
  • ADs three part method (as used in these EST
    studies)
  • i) Datagathering
  • ii) Scoping
  • iii) Reporting
  • EST Study One (Longterm Behaviours) 55 selected
    sources
  • EST Study Two (Energy Schools) 45 selected
    sources
  • Studies begun in October 2006, completed March
    2007

6
Availability of Longterm Evidence
  • As anticipated, a dearth of longterm impact
    evaluations available
  • Study One identified only three longterm
    evaluations (ie. with more than 2-year
    follow-ups)
  • Growing to Greatness (NYLC (US) 2006)
  • Longterm survey of ex-service-learners, within
    random sample of 18 to 28 year olds. Differences
    in behaviour observed, but causality not
    investigated.
  • National Trust Guardianship Scheme 2006 (Peacock
    2006)
  • Small-scale follow-up study of ex-primary
    pupils, to establish lasting pupil impacts of
    conservation work on local NT site. Hard to
    identify relevant behaviour measures, and
    causality not investigated.
  • Longitudinal Citizenship Study (eg. NFER 2006)
  • Forthcoming evaluation of Citizenship Curriculum
    by NFER. Four Annual Reports to date, but impact
    evidence due in 2008 at best.

7
Availability of Evidence the Citizenship Study
  • Citizenship Study serves as case in point, on
    gargantuan scale
  • Citizenship in schools as an experiment in
    knowledge and behaviour to see if 2002s 11 year
    olds know more...and will be more involved by
    2009 (Crick 2002) if results negative or
    inconclusive compulsion will be dropped
  • NFER appointed to run longitudinal Citizenship
    study (2002-2010) to track progress of
    Citizenship arrangements, and evaluate pupil
    outcomes of knowledge, skills, attitudes and
    behaviour
  • Impact outcomes not yet available (c. 2008?), but
    (unreleased) qaire suggests few behavioural
    measures beyond (reported) voting intentions.
  • Pro-environmental component suspected to comprise
    intentions to litter, behaviour-specific
    attititudes, and understanding of citizenship
  • Difficulties in measuring behavioural outcomes
    inc. isolating effects (causality), and light
    touch nature of Citizenship in curriculum (eg.
    lack of definition, lack of agreed behavioural
    outcomes, varying assessment measures)

8
Availability of Longterm Evidence Evaluation
Limits
  • Study One not a definitive collection of
    evidence, but signs of unidentified further
    sources were slim
  • Contacts interviewed doubted much else out there,
    and literature reviews (some systematic)
    complained of lack of longterm evidence (eg. EPPI
    Centre at IoE NICE Behaviour Change Review due
    Dec 2007)
  • Considerable barriers to undertaking longterm
    evals mean such evidence is unlikely to be
    forthcoming, for instance...
  • - relatively high costs
  • - hard to undertake (eg. recruit participants
    long after an initiative)
  • - low recall among ex-participants
  • - near-impossibility of establishing causality
    (NB available evals dont...)
  • - misgivings among educationalists as to
    value/aim of the exercise

? Conducting longterm behavioural evaluations is
certainly impractical, and may be inappropriate
9
Availability of Shortterm Evidence - Generic
  • As well as a lack of longterm outcome
    evaluations, only a limited number of shortterm
    behavioural outcome evals identified
  • Robust evidence of behavioural impacts clearest
    in Safety Education
  • - Lifeskills Learning for Life Centre, Bristol
  • - Kerbcraft (pedestrian safety skills training),
    Drumchapel pilot
  • Some evidence on shortterm behaviour change also
    in health domain
  • - Reviews of healthy eating programmes, and some
    NHSS impacts
  • Little evidence of shortterm behaviour change by
    children elsewhere some no evidence, some
    targetting parents behaviours indirectly
  • - Energy-related Env Citizenship Fairtrade
    Other (ie. Waste)
  • Conclusions

? few ed activities look for behavioural
outcomes ? children not seen as primary
audience/actors in many areas of SD-related
behaviour change
10
Availability of Shortterm Evidence
Energy-Related
  • Relative to extent of initiatives, evidence of
    impacts is scarce
  • eg. Powergen new schools programme, not
    evaluated yet
  • eg. BG Think Energy undergoing relaunch (not
    evaluated yet), and future eval would explore
    brand awareness and programme perceptions
  • CSE/EST Energy Matters exceptional
  • - compelling evidence of behavioural impacts vs.
    comparison group (qv. Capener 1998, featuring 12
    month follow-up)
  • - ...but measures parental behaviours, not
    pupils
  • - ...and causality implied, not established
    statistically
  • GAP Action at School also shows impacts
  • - in terms of whole-school resource savings,
    but not pupils behaviours
  • - wider impacts (eg. empowering pupils) not
    investigated

11
Making a Case for Longterm Impacts
  • Widespread conviction across the sources that
    education impacts on behaviours in the longterm
    given lack of longterm evidence, this remains a
    conviction
  • Conviction exists in different formulations, all
    based on deep transformative effects, but best of
    which acknowledge uncertainty, eg.
  • Clearly education can influence attitude in
    order to change behaviour.... This strong
    relationshipis not supported by all studies.
  • Education on Energy European Communities 2006
  • It is essential that the Citizenship push
    continues as it would appear these messages
    emerge as modifications to behaviour later on as
    adults, but unfortunately not at the time.
  • Teenage Dirtbag, Encams 2004
  • The work in schools is sowing seeds, we have to
    hope they get nurtured.
  • Dickens Camelot Streets Waste Project,
    Liverpool, 2004

? Faced with (irreparable?) absence of evidence,
best turn to theory
12
Lessons from Behavioural Theory
  • Theory shows factors driving pro-environmental
    behaviours to be complex, qv. eg. Kolmuss and
    Agyemans Mind the Gap (2002)
  • The question of what shapes pro-environmental
    behaviour is such a complex one that it cannot be
    visualized through one single framework or
    model.
  • Moreover, different barriers face different
    individuals, even for the same behaviour (qv. eg.
    Barr et al 2005)
  • External (contextual) barriers seen to
    predominate (eg. Shoves lock in) thus both
    Stern and McKenzie Mohr advise address physical
    barriers first
  • Three internal (psychological) barriers feature
    across diverse theories each represents limiting
    factors, difficult for individual to tackle
  • - Norms (Norms guide how we should behave
    McKenzie Mohr)
  • - Agency (cf. Perceived Behavioural Control,
    Self Efficacy)
  • - Habit (Many behaviors...matters of habit or
    routine...rarely considered Stern 2000)

13
Lessons from Behavioural Theory Role of
Education
  • 1998 study suggested 80 of factors determining
    p-e behaviours are not related to p-e knowledge
    or awareness (cited by KA in Mind the Gap)
  • However, education-led factors and learning
    contribute to underlying motivations across p-e
    behaviours, and shape societal norms
  • Theoretical drivers which can be linked to
    educational activity include
  • - Raising awareness of oppties for and impacts
    of p-e behaviour
  • - Encouraging p-e beliefs, and positive
    behaviour-specific attitudes
  • - Tackling norms, agency and habits, often
    through group work
  • - Building emotional investment in a problem,
    often via active involvement
  • - Providing a forum in which sus lifestyle
    approaches can be negotiated
  • - Creating action learning opportunities, for
    reflective practice
  • ? Behavioural theory suggests education-related
    factors are not key determinants, but they shape
    deep-seated longterm factors

14
Lessons from Environmental Education Theory
  • Andy Dobson asks fundamental question about role
    of Citizenship education in pro-environmental
    change (2003)
  • Can liberal education cope with the value-laden
    nature of
  • sustainability questions?
  • Or, from Martha Monroe, at what point does
    education teeter into advocacy or worse,
    brainwashing?
  • Citz-related disciplines of Environmental
    Education and Education for Sustainable
    Development riven with debates over purposes
    (eg. education by, with, for the
    environment or SD)
  • Behavioural outcomes inherent in Environmental
    Education since Tbilisi (1977) but
    educationalists tend to be polarised
  • Paul Vare and Bill Scott identify polar
    purposes as complementary
  • ESD1 (environmentalists view) teaches
    pre-determined behaviours
  • ESD2 (educationalists view) develops learners
    capacity to think critically
  • Growing appreciation that ESD1/2 tensions are
    resolved on the ground

15
Lessons from Environmental Education Theory
  • Martha Monroe et als Framework for Env Ed
    Strategies 2006 in press
  • Env Ed and B Change a continuum (Monroe joining
    up the literatures)
  • Purposes of env ed morph into one another in
    participative approaches
  • Env ed spans both behaviours and debate for
    best fit, activities should span spectrum (and
    evaluate all)

16
Towards Consensus? Citizenship Revisited
  • Study One stressed experimental nature of
    Citizenship project, with ultimate goal of
    creating better citizens by 2009
  • Part of wider behaviour change agenda to enhance
    democratic life for all of us...beginning in
    schools and radiating out (Citizenship Orders,
    1999)
  • But NFER evaluation suggests insufficient
    emphasis on Active Citizenship opportunities mean
    there is currently no radiating out (Ireland et
    al 2006)
  • Even if there were, its doubtful NFER
    Longitudinal Study would evidence it
  • Current tension between NFERs participative
    approach and Ofsteds essentially prescriptive
    approach (2006), emphasising core curriculum
    content, timetabled lessons, robust assessment,
    Citizenship GCSE (...and linkages to ECM!)
  • Its unclear which direction Citizenship will
    take by 2009, conclude NFER
  • QCA Secondary Curriculum Review (2007) further
    complicates the picture a move towards
    child-centred flexible delivery, and increased
    participation

17
Towards Sustainability? Whole School Programmes
  • As ESD1/ESD2 purposes morph in participation, so
    better citizens are best created through learning
    in practice
  • Practise What You Teach (DfE 1993) definition
    of whole school approach
  • Whole school approach includes teaching
    learning, school management, pupil participation,
    community links
  • Many whole school programmes sustainability-relate
    d, including EcoSchools, Healthy Schools (NHSS),
    and GAP Action at School (if short-term)
  • As an example of these programmes, EcoSchool
    elements include
  • Environmental management tool EcoCommittee
    Awards/Accreditation framework
  • Benefits to whole school (inc. Ofsted!), whole
    pupil (empowerment more than attainment), and
    whole community (social norms and social
    impacts GAP)
  • Key function is to embed issues/values in school
    ethos

18
Towards Sustainable Schools
  • Tony Blair (2004) in Consultation Paper (DfES May
    2006)
  • Sustainable development will not be just a
    subject in the classroom it will be in its
    bricks and mortar and the way the school uses and
    even generates its own power. Our students wont
    just be told about sustainable development, they
    will see and work within it a living learning
    place in which to explore what a sustainable
    lifestyle means.
  • Full of unfulfilled promise (the vision
    thing)...and Consultation met with qualified
    approval (DfES November 2006)
  • We back your vision but show us you are serious
    in seeing it through
  • but begs big questions, including
  • - Very ESD2, and even radical but does Blair
    know (or intend) it?
  • - What is a sustainable lifestyle and what are
    the limits to exploring one?
  • - Not just a subject in the classroom...ESD
    not even a subject!

19
Sustainable Schools Definitions Elements
  • No agreed definition of a Sustainable School
    exists (and arguably none is possible a rod for
    DfES own back, unlike other home nations?)
  • Best definition yet has a Sustainable School as
    guided by the principle of care care for
    onself, care for each other, and care for the
    environment (DfES May 2006)
  • Consensus is its a school which embeds
    sustainability in all they do, ie. takes a whole
    school approach to SD
  • Consultation Paper identifies three aspects to
    delivery, the 3 Cs
  • - Campus, Curriculum, Community
  • - (but puts emphasis on the main first two)
  • ...and 8 areas of school activity or doorways,
    to advance SD through
  • Food and Drink Energy and Water Travel and
    Traffic
  • Purchasing and Waste Buildings and Grounds
    Inclusion and Participation
  • Local Well-being Global Dimension

20
Becoming a Sustainable School
  • No clear roadmap yet available (DfES Action Plan,
    due January 2007?)
  • No evidence either two studies forthcoming
  • i) NCSL / WWF Leadership for Sustainable
    Schools due March/June 2007
  • ii) Ofsted/Reading University Pupils Views of
    Sustainable Schools 2006-09
  • Consultation Paper identifies the whole school
    programmes NHSS and EcoSchools as ways in for
    schools who wish to get started (DfES 2006)
  • ...but WWF Pathways (2004) approach more likely
    a flexible and dynamic planning tool and
    heir to DfES s3 self-assessment tool (2006)
  • Ofsted/Reading case study schools all Pathways
    schools, and most also EcoSchools (Green Flag or
    towards), NHSS, Global Gateways etc.
  • Will Sustainable Schools supersede or celebrate
    these schemes?
  • And what of Every Child Matters? Consultation
    says ECM and Sustainable Schools are highly
    relevant to one another but the area
    under-represented is the environment
  • How then to fit climate change into the ECM
    outcomes? Economic wellbeing! (DfES 2006)

21
The Role of Energy in Sustainable Schools
  • Energy prominent in the Sustainable Schools
    agenda (Doorway 2), and anecdotal evidence its
    the main attraction for schools getting involved
  • DfES Sustainable Schools papers (2006) present
    energys role as follows
  • Curriculum
  • - through knowledge, values and skills become
    good stewards of energy in school and at home
  • - but no place for climate change in QCA Review,
    and SD not mandatory till KS4
  • Campus
  • - by 2020 schools to be models of energy
    efficiency and renewable energy, showcasing wind,
    solar and biofuel sources in their communities
  • - Sustainable Schools are affordable (and
    more fiscally prudent Kats 2006)
  • - Emphasise good management of energy first,
    then deployment of appropriate technologies (EE
    equipment, passive designs, RE sources)
  • Community
  • - Schools to promote awareness of sustainable
    energy to stakeholders (contractors and
    suppliers, parents and community learners)
  • - Schools to build links with Local Authorities
    and other outside bodies which support efforts
    to reduce energy use and increase renewable
    energy use

22
Ways Forward for Sustainable Schools
  • Provide a concrete definition of a Sustainable
    School, or at least a means of identification
    (accreditation framework?), in order to...
  • Build an evidence base to inform how to become a
    Sustainable School, predominantly based in case
    studies
  • Clarify the links between the Sustainable Schools
    agenda and other reshaping initiatives
    Extended Schools Citizenship EcoSchools etc
  • Integrate the aims of Sustainable Schools with
    the Outcomes of Every Child Matters (ideally,
    rewrite ECM)
  • Commit funding to support development of
    Sustainable Schools
  • Present a joined-up face to schools to support
    their efforts to embed SD across the 3 Cs, ie.
    combine educational goals of DfES with behaviour
    change goals of Defra (via Climate Challenge
    team?)
  • Pursue energy across the 3 Cs, maximising school
    energy savings, effective educational
    experiences, and community behaviour change

23
  • ad_at_andrewdarnton.co.uk
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