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Section III. Teacher Respondents

by CAEE last modified 12-26-2007 17:09

Section III. Teacher Respondents

 

A series of specific questions were asked of those respondents who indicated their work was in formal education (PreK-12 and higher education- Table W10).  The following teacher-specific questions related to grades and subjects taught as well as questions relating to the level of environmental education taught in schools.  The three tables below summarize the findings of these questions.

 

Table T1.  Teacher Respondents by Grade and Subject

Teachers by Grade Taught

(n=112)*

Teachers by Subject Taught

(n=111)*

PreK

K-2

3-4

5-6

7-8

HS

HE

Sci

Math

LA

SS

PE

Mus

Art

Other**

8

18

23

33

26

45

18

93

30

28

28

8

6

9

31

* Totals across grade or subject may not equal total n as some teachers selected more than one category.

 

** Other = environmental education/sustainability/outdoor learning, energy (n=11); health (n=4); other language arts (n=4); computers/information management/technology (n=3); family and consumer studies (n=2); other science (n=2), gifted and talented (n=1)

 

Discussion Points:

·         Respondents to the Grade and Subject questions represent teachers across all grade levels and across all subject areas although the greatest representation is of teachers in high school and 5-6th grades and teachers who teach science

 

Table T2.  Environmental Education in the Schools

EE is taught in school   71% (n=80)

EE not taught in school 29% (n=33)

Separate Subject*

Integrated into Science*

Integrated into Other*

Reason

% (n) and most frequent response (n=30)

29

62

28

Limited time

 

48% (14) primary reason

Integrated into other = language arts (n=5); social studies, geography, history, civics (n=5); multiple areas/all (n=4); not part of our curriculum/does not apply (n=3); field trips/field experiments (n=2); health (n=1)

EE not part of standardized testing

41% (12) primary reason

No admin support for EE

32% (9) primary reason

32% (9) does not apply

State standards don’t support EE

34% (10) major reason

Don’t have appropriate resources

50% (14) minor reason

Don’t have proper training

48% (14) does not apply

Don’t believe in EE

 

97% (28) does not apply

* Numbers in these columns are number of teachers who indicated teaching EE this way; some teachers indicated more than one category so these totals will not equal total n of 80.

 

Discussion Points:

·        In schools where environmental education is taught, more teachers integrate environmental education in to science curriculum (62) than teach it as a separate subject (29), though quite a  few teachers integrated EE into other subjects (28) . 

·        In schools where environmental education is not taught, primary reasons include limited time, not part of standardized testing, and no administrative support.

 

Table T3.  Environmental Education in the Classroom

Currently teach EE in the classroom = 81 teachers (72% of teachers who responded yes to this question)

 

Materials used to teach EE in classroom

 

# of mentions*

Local, state, or federal government materials

72

I make up my own activities

71

The Projects (Wild, Wet, LT, FLP)

70

Non-profit organization materials

69

Media

67

Local industry materials

52

Web pages

48

Other published materials

45

Other

15

                   * Respondents could select as many responses as applied; on average, each teacher

   selected approximately 6 of the 9 response categories.

 

Discussion Points:

·        Materials used to teach environmental education in formal education classrooms include a diverse set of materials including government agency materials, the Projects (Project Wild, Wet, Learning Tree, and Food, Land and People) and non-profit organization materials.  As well, many teachers (71) make up their own activities.