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Articles

Understanding Taiwanese adolescents’ connections with nature: rethinking conventional definitions and scales for environmental education

ORCID Icon &
Pages 115-129 | Received 08 Nov 2018, Accepted 12 Sep 2019, Published online: 24 Oct 2019
 

Abstract

Losing contact with nature has become a serious concern in recent years, not only because it depletes children and adolescents’ physical health and well-being, but also because it creates apathy towards natural environments. Most past research has developed scales to measure adult’s connection with nature (CWN), leaving adolescents’ CWN a less examined academic question. The purpose of this exploratory qualitative study is therefore to understand what Taiwanese adolescents experienced and perceived as CWN and thus re-evaluate existing CWN definitions and assumptions proposed in western cultural contexts. We adopted phenomenology and grounded theory as guiding methods to interview 10 junior and senior high school students (age 16-18) in northern urban Taiwan through open and relational sampling. We developed a three-construct CWN model that consisted of sensory engagement, emotional attachment, and symbolic meaning-making. Our findings also indicated that adolescents’ CWN was distinct from children and adults, and cultural differences may exist. Rather than a stable personality trait, adolescents’ CWN continued to develop and change with educational interventions. Based on our findings, we suggest designing a specific CWN scale for adolescents for future research and propose pedagogical principles to help educators to strengthen adolescents’ CWN.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the research participants who generously shared their experiences and ideas. Without them, this study would not have been possible. We particularly thank Martha Monroe, Arjen Wals and all the reviewers for their valuable comments on this article.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Yu-Chi Tseng

Yu-Chi Tseng is an assistant professor at National Taichung University of Education, Taiwan. Her research interests are environmental education, outdoor education, climate change education, conservation psychology, and youth program development and evaluation to improve adolescent’s connection with nature.

Shun-Mei Wang

Shun-Mei Wang is an associate professor at National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan. Her recent research focuses on environmental behavior, environmental education pedagogy, green schools, and animal protection education.

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