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Livia Somerville; Matthias Stucki; Regula Keller – International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2025
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the environmental footprint of a university of applied sciences in 2019 and 2020, including the effects of the lockdown periods. The study identified the main sources of emissions and assessed the pandemic-related effects. Design/methodology/approach: Using the life cycle assessment methodology,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Andrea Estey – Childhood Education, 2024
In gatherings facilitated by Shelburne Farms Institute for Sustainable Schools staff, fellows have the chance to connect, collaborate, and support each other; to draw inspiration from invited speakers, ranging from artists to climate scientists; and to have dedicated time to work on their own projects. Participants find the program to be…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Climate, High School Teachers, Environmental Education
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Hyena Kim – Gender and Education, 2024
Living in a wasted world is an educational problem that requires a radical shift in more-than-human relationships. Education has served as a means for re/producing socio-ecological waste by legitimizing discrimination among earthly beings. Ecofeminism reveals a common mechanism underlying different hierarchies as well as embodied connections…
Descriptors: Feminism, Ecology, Environmental Education, Humanism
Hand, Marge – Outdoor Communicator, 1980
Recounts highlights of a 1980 weekend course at Queens College Environmental Center (New York) focusing on lessons from history and other cultures in using overlooked resources to develop "Appropriate Technology." Practical and innovative energy alternatives discussed include solar energy, wind power, indoor hydroponic farming, shellfish…
Descriptors: Conservation Education, Depleted Resources, Ecology, Energy Conservation
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Farrell, Tracy; Hall, Troy E.; White, Dave D. – Journal of Leisure Research, 2001
Interviewed campers regarding their perceptions of impacts to vegetation, soil, and trees, comparing campers' measurements of vegetation loss, mineral soil exposure, tree damage, and site size with managers' evaluations. Most campers noticed vegetation impacts, and about half noticed soil impacts and tree damage. Most commented positively about…
Descriptors: Camping, Conservation (Environment), Depleted Resources, Ecology
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Knabe, Friederike – Green Teacher, 1999
Describes a set of experiments that enable students to see the effects of soil erosion and some of the measures that can be taken to prevent it. Illustrates ways in which soil and biodiversity can be restored in areas that have suffered severe land degradation. (CCM)
Descriptors: Depleted Resources, Earth Science, Ecology, Elementary Secondary Education
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Roberts, B. – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 1985
Identifies land degradation as Australia's most urgent environmental problem and recommends the development of a land ethic for soil conservation. Presents a 15-point conservation education plan that encourages a sustainable ecological basis for rural production and also cultivates ecologically sound habits toward nature. (ML)
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Depleted Resources, Ecology, Educational Principles
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Ambler, Marjane – Tribal College, 1996
Examines different approaches to environmental activism taken by Native Americans and Westerners as a result of their differing views of nature. Describes historical Western-Indian conflicts related to the preservation of bison in Yellowstone Park. Suggests that there is a growing acknowledgment in the scientific community of traditional…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Conservation (Environment)
Clearing, 1990
Discussed is the idea that the use of fossil fuels could render Earth uninhabitable long before supplies of them are exhausted. Possible solutions to this problem are described and include a revolution in technology, worldwide economic strategies, and a change in the way people think. (KR)
Descriptors: Alternative Energy Sources, Conservation (Environment), Depleted Resources, Ecology
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Harrison, J. Derek – Journal of General Education, 1987
Describes Monroe Community College's interdisciplinary liberal arts program, the Human Ecology Project, which explores the problems of energy and resource depletion and social and ecological imbalances; increases students' self-reliance in food, energy, shelter, and health care; and examines holistically the interrelationships of technology,…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Conservation Education, Depleted Resources, Ecological Factors
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Anderson, Terry; Wentworth, Donald R. – Social Education, 1997
Traces the problems of water overuse to the fact that many farmers are allowed to use water at a fraction of its real cost. Maintains that government subsidies promote misuse and abuse of this resource. Proposes two solutions: environmentally friendly water prices and environmentally friendly water ownership. (MJP)
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Depleted Resources, Ecology, Economics
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Allem, Antonio C. – Environmentalist, 1990
Discussed is the continual depletion of the world's natural resources and the plea of conservationists. An examination of the dialectic nature/nurture controversy is used to see whether this may account for the state of disharmony recorded between man and nature. (KR)
Descriptors: College Science, Conservation (Environment), Depleted Resources, Ecological Factors
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Harvey, Mark W. T. – OAH Magazine of History, 1996
Presents a concise and interesting overview of U.S. attitudes towards nature, conservation, and environmental issues. Traces the constantly shifting relationship between these issues and social and commercial interests. Follows this relationship from the early colonists to the current environmental movement. (MJP)
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Context Effect, Depleted Resources, Ecological Factors
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Hardin, Garrett – Focus, 1992
In discussing the human and cultural implications of scientific discoveries and knowledge, the biological concept of carrying capacity is explored. Maintaining that human beings are truly animals answering to principles that govern all animals, the author addresses the need for human populations to work within the context of culture and carrying…
Descriptors: Change, Creationism, Cultural Context, Culture
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Trainer, Ted – Geographical Education, 1990
Discusses the overconsumption and overproduction of industrialized nations and the condition of developing nations. Considers the global revolution in institutions, systems, values, and lifestyles necessary to implement sustainable development. Depicts a world of decentralized, self-sufficient communities, and describes education's potential role…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Consciousness Raising, Conservation (Environment), Decentralization