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CEDD Curriculum Study: Core Competencies

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Claire Christian (NCSE) CEDD survey and workshop participants. The Problem Context ... Professional certification & accreditation criteria (1/2 no) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CEDD Curriculum Study: Core Competencies


1
CEDD Curriculum StudyCore Competencies
  • Will Focht and Shirley Vincent
  • Oklahoma State University
  • February 5, 2005

2
Acknowledgements
  • Research funded by
  • Council of Environmental Deans and Directors
  • National Council for Science and the Environment
  • Project Kaleidoscope (NSF)
  • OSU Environmental Institute
  • Career information provided by
  • Kevin Doyle (Environmental Careers Organization)
  • John Esson (Environmental Careers Center)
  • Analytic assistance provided by
  • Claire Christian (NCSE)
  • CEDD survey and workshop participants

3
The Problem Context
  • Environmental curricula vary widely, which poses
    potential threats to legitimacy
  • Collective program and field identity
  • Program review and accreditation
  • Professional certification
  • Student recruitment and employment
  • Institutional and client support

4
The Solution Challenge
  • Improve legitimacy through prescription of core
    competencies, but
  • remain inclusive
  • respect institutional cultures and constraints
  • protect flexibility and innovation
  • ensure responsiveness to changing needs

5
Influences on Curriculum Change
  • Environmental social movements
  • Environmental career opportunities
  • Environmental programs

6
Environmental Movements
  • 1850s-1890s Preservation
  • national parks, wild lands, etc. (man out of
    nature)
  • 1890s-1950s Conservation
  • natural resource management (man manages
    nature)
  • 1950s-1970s Ecological
  • scientific understanding (man understands
    nature)
  • 1970s-1990s Regulatory
  • pollution control (man controls impacts on
    nature)
  • 1990s-present Sustainability
  • integration of ecosystem conservation, economic
    security, and social justice (man as part of
    nature)
  • - Adapted from Sherburne Abbott (cited in ECO
    2004)

7
Environmental Careers
  • 1970s
  • Rapid growth
  • Compliance sanitary engineers conservation
    scientists (foresters, fish and wildlife
    biologists)
  • 1980s
  • Continued rapid growth
  • More compliance site remediation waste managers
  • 1990s
  • Slow growth
  • Pollution prevention and green business

8
Environmental Careers
  • Early 2000s
  • Negative growth but very recent return to rapid
    growth (primarily in private sector)
  • Economy, market, and political pressures
  • Integrated regional planning sustainability
    smart growth
  • Changes due to industry maturation, technology
    cycles, declining government employment,
    retirements

9
Environmental Careers
  • Future Trends
  • Green Business
  • Renewable energy, energy conservation, green
    building, eco-friendly consumer goods,
    ecotourism, eco-investing, green certifications
  • Land Use
  • Smart growth planning
  • Habitat restoration
  • Reconciliation ecology (built and natural
    environments)
  • Environmental Management Systems
  • Fastest growth in foreign countries

10
Environmental Programs Evolution
  • Late 1960s
  • First free-standing programs
  • First scholarly article on environmental
    education
  • Curricula were multidisciplinary
  • Emphasis on natural resource management
  • 1970s
  • Rapid growth in number of programs (total to 500)
  • 2/3 of growth were undergraduate studies
    programs
  • Curricula emphasized sociopolitical aspects

11
Environmental Programs
  • 1980s
  • No net growth in number of programs
  • New programs focused more on science technology
  • 1990s
  • Return to rapid growth (total to 900)
  • Shift back towards sociopolitical, with new focus
    on scale (spatial and temporal) and complex
    systems
  • Early 2000s
  • Accelerated growth (total rose to 1300)
  • Sustainability serving as an organizing principle

12
Background of Study
13
Study History
  • Winter 2002 CEDD formed
  • Summer 2002 Curriculum Committee formed
  • Winter 2003 Discussions lead to agreement to
    conduct a formal study
  • Summer 2003 Presentation of survey and Q study
    results
  • Winter 2004 Workshop designed to explore
    consensus on skills and content
  • Summer 2004 Discussion of next steps
  • Winter 2005 Discussion of findings

14
Study Design
  • Phase I On-line survey
  • Program and institutional characteristics
  • Curriculum design views
  • Phase II On-line Q sorts
  • Perspectives on curricula
  • Conflict assessment to characterize nature of
    debate
  • Identity number and polarity perspectives
  • Identify areas of consensus
  • Phase III Workshop
  • Explore consensus on core competencies

15
Respondent Sample
  • Self-selected (not random) from CEDD members in
    2003
  • National population 1061 CEDD population
    103 Sample 61 respondents from 58 institutions
  • Sample representativeness determined against CEDD
    national (Romero Jones 2003) populations
  • Both the sample and CEDD are over-represented by
    undergrad liberal arts and large doctoral
    institutions and under-represented by masters
    institutions
  • Both the sample and CEDD are over-represented by
    Southern, and under-represented by Midwestern,
    institutions
  • Sample undergrad programs are about 33 smaller
    than those in the CEDD but same as those in the
    national population
  • Sample programs are about 25 younger than both
    populations
  • Thus, some results may not be generalizable to
    the U.S.

16
Study Findings
17
Consensus Assessment
  • Consensus
  • Support for development of an interdisciplinary
    core curriculum that emphasizes problem-solving
    skills
  • Focus on human-nature interactions
  • Dissensus
  • Breadth versus depth
  • Need for and definition of universal core
    disciplines and field/curriculum boundaries
  • Undergrad tracking and emphasis on career
    preparation
  • Professional certification and program
    accreditation

18
Correlations
  • Grad programs at masters institutions are in
    depts
  • Dedicated faculty occur at
  • older and larger undergrad programs
  • grad programs in private institutions
  • undergrad programs in undergrad masters
    institutions
  • Internships are required by grad programs at
    private institutions
  • Studies programs are located at private
    institutions science programs are located at
    public institutions
  • Doctoral insts have more non-degree options

19
Other Findings
  • Required internships (1/4)
  • Specializations (3/4)
  • Professional certification accreditation
    criteria (1/2 no)
  • UG tracking career v. grad school (1/2 no
    difference)
  • Research requirement (G3/4, U1/4)
  • Client involvement (1/2 high importance)
  • Institutional location
  • Departments/Units U 1/6, G 1/4
  • Colleges/Schools U 2/3 G 1/2
  • Institutional U 1/6, G 1/4

20
Analysisof Perspectives
21
Q Sort Instruction
  • What is your view of how environmental program
    curricula should be designed?

22
Q Factor Analysis 1
  • Q sorts of 47 statements
  • Principal components extraction
  • Varimax rotation
  • 40 of 44 sorts represented by 3 factors
  • Significance defined at plt0.001, CV 0.451
  • 5 confounded (4 on AB, 1 on AC)
  • Correlations
  • AB 0.66, AC 0.41, BC 0.42
  • No bipolar factors found

23
PerspectivesEnvironmental CitizenEnvironmental
Problem SolverEnvironmental Scientist
24
A Environmental Citizen
  • Orientation
  • Increase environmental awareness and scientific
    literacy regardless of career choice
  • Favors
  • Inclusion of social science, humanities, and
    skills courses along with natural science into a
    transdisciplinary curriculum
  • Flexibility and tailoring to institutional
    strengths
  • Disfavors
  • Professional orientation, certifications,
    undergrad tracking, boundaries, individualized
    curricula, and client involvement
  • Dominant view among undergraduate liberal arts
    institutions with environmental studies programs

25
B Environmental Problem Solver
  • Orientation
  • Systems-focused training, complex
    problem-solving, and professional development
  • Favors
  • Breadth over depth, institutionally tailored
    cores, program flexibility to deal with changing
    needs, internships, and client responsiveness
  • Disfavors
  • Deep disciplinary strength, boundaries, universal
    core
  • Doctoral/research institutions dominate this
    perspective

26
C Environmental Scientist
  • Orientation
  • Anchor in a natural science discipline (more
    likely to be housed in departments)
  • Favors
  • Universal core grounded in natural sciences and
    engineering, boundaries, certification,
    accreditation
  • Disfavors
  • Breadth over depth, emphasis in social science/
    humanities, accommodation of all students
  • Dominant view among masters institutions

27
Consensus Areas
  • Pragmatic Realism
  • Environmental problems are both natural
    sociopolitical (at interface of society nature)
  • Solutions require transdisciplinary approaches
    within fuzzy boundaries
  • Tailoring to institutional strengths is necessary
  • Science and technology are not panaceas

28
Varimax Rotation Plot (AB)
29
Q Factor Analysis 2
  • Judgmental rotation performed to
  • Explore potential consensus (middle view as
    opposed to end views)
  • Explore confounded perspectives (AB only)
  • Reduce the number of consensus items shared by
    AB perspectives (to tease apart these two views)
  • Add to our understanding of perspectives
  • Rotation angle 44

30
Judgmental Rotation Plot (A' B')
31
PerspectivesEnvironmental VisionaryResponsive
ProfessionalScience Literate
32
A' Environmental Visionary
  • Orientation
  • Synthesis of natural social sciences and
    humanities is important to understanding
    human-nature interactions
  • Favors
  • Breadth over depth, institutionally tailored
    cores, uncertainty measurement and reporting
  • Disfavors
  • Undergrad tracking, universal core, certification
    guidelines
  • Dominant among both undergraduate and doctoral
    institutions

33
B' Responsive Professional vsScience Literate
  • Bipolar Perspective!
  • Orientation
  • RP broad preparation for varied changing
    professional demands but with program structure
    (boundaries, universal core, certification and
    accreditation), client involvement
  • SL students should have a strong natural science
    foundation but tailored to institutional
    constraints and individual student needs
  • Disagreements
  • Breadth versus depth, program structuring, client
    involvement

34
Return of Stonehenge
35
Perspective Groups
  • Monoliths Environmental Scientist (C)
  • Universal science core
  • Columnists Science Literate (B'-)
  • Flexible science core
  • Spanners Environmental Visionary (A')
  • Environmental Citizen (A)
  • Awareness and responsible action
  • Environmental Problem Solver (B)
  • Applied systems focus
  • Responsive Professional (B')
  • Structured programs and professional orientation

36
Exploration of Consensus on aCore Curriculum
37
Workshop
  • Goal Explore potential for consensus on core
    competencies
  • Survey Importance ratings of 12 skills areas and
    14 disciplinary areas
  • Breakout Sessions Based on Q factors, to seek
    within-perspective consensus ratings
  • Plenary Session Seek consensus on ratings across
    perspectives

38
Skills Areas
39
Disciplinary Areas
40
Workshop Findings
  • Consensus importance on most skills
  • Very high intellectual communication
  • High research (literature, lab, field)
  • Mod personal (management, teamwork)
  • Consensus on some disciplines
  • High natural science stat policy ethics
  • Lower behavioral sciences
  • Dissensus
  • Computational skills (moderate to high)
  • Math, physics, engineering, toxicology,
    economics, history

41
Workshop Outcomes
  • Q works!
  • Distinguishes individual perspectives and thereby
    clarifies similarities and differences,
    facilitated intra-group consensus (shared
    identity)
  • Discussion works!
  • Focus on broad issues, clarify terms, encourage
    compromise
  • Core competency recommendations
  • Skills intellectual communication research
  • Disciplines natural science stat policy
    ethics
  • Remaining disciplines left to specializations

42
Next Steps
43
Four Phases
  • Revise and extend survey to 600 environmental
    programs
  • Evaluate 24 model programs varying across
    institutional structure, program curricular
    design elements, and geographic location
  • Conduct historical study of mature programs for
    evolution of curricula reasons for change
  • Convene national conference to present results
    and formulate recommendations

44
Discussion
  • 1. Which programs should be considered
    environmental programs?
  • 2. Should community colleges and those that
    offer only non-degree certificates be included?
  • 3. How should model programs be identified?
  • 4. What is meant by multi, inter, trans, and
    meta disciplinarity? How can these be achieved?
  • 5. When are vertical and horizontal designs most
    appropriate?
  • 6. Should three cores be developed to match the
    three perspectives? Should sustainability shape
    core design?

45
Disciplinary Constructions
46
Vertical vs Horizontal Curricula
  • Vertical designs are those that include multi- or
    inter-disciplinary coursework and emphasize depth
    over breadth (tree metaphor) best for
    foundational or advanced curriculum?
  • Horizontal designs are those that include trans-
    or meta-disciplinary coursework and emphasize
    breadth over depth (venn diagram metaphor) best
    for foundational or advanced curriculum?
  • Horizontal does not mean lack of focus!
  • Watershed management, sustainable agriculture,
    environmental management systems, human ecology,
    energy management, natural resource mgt., etc.
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