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Ryu, H-C and S. D. Brody. (2006). Examining the impacts of a graduate course on sustainable development using ecological footprint analysis. International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 7(2): 158-175.

Examining the impacts of a graduate course on sustainable development using ecological footprint analysis

Summary This study evaluates the degree to which learning about sustainable development in a graduate course can change students’ perceptions and behaviors. The graduate course utilized a problem based learning approach to explore sustainable development topics such as designing a sustainable community and addressing adverse effects of a subdivision development. The researchers used ecological footprint analysis to measure changes in students’ perceptions and behaviors before and after the course as compared to a control group. Results of the ecological footprint surveys were analyzed using paired tests of means to assess pre-post changes for both the study and control groups. In addition, multiple regression analyses were used to identify the most influential factors contributing to participants’ ecological footprint changes. Independent variables examined in the multiple regression analyses included group (study or control), gender, age, income, environmental awareness and distance between home and work.
Detailed Profile
Full Report
Instruments:
A complete set of evaluation instruments is available in the report
Program Search Terms Evaluation Search Terms
Setting
Formal
Type
Workshop/Course
Topic
Sustainability
Audience
College/Continuing Education
Type
Outcome
Evaluator
Internal
Outputs
Outcomes
Behaviors
Impacts
Approach
Quantitative
Data Collection
Questionnaires/Surveys
Design
Pre-test
Post-test
Comparison/Control Groups
Quantitative Analysis
Inferential Statistics
Qualitative Analysis

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