Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action

Environmental degradation necessitates urgent action, yet a gap often exists between awareness and behavior, particularly among youth who are crucial for future sustainability. Higher education institutions potentially play a significant role in shaping student environmentalism. This study addresse...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohammed El Messaoudi, Mohamed Bouftira, Aboulrhit Lamiae
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Andalas 2025-07-01
Series:Journal of Digital Sociohumanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jds.unand.ac.id/index.php/jds/article/view/28
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849228852167966720
author Mohammed El Messaoudi
Mohamed Bouftira
Aboulrhit Lamiae
author_facet Mohammed El Messaoudi
Mohamed Bouftira
Aboulrhit Lamiae
author_sort Mohammed El Messaoudi
collection DOAJ
description Environmental degradation necessitates urgent action, yet a gap often exists between awareness and behavior, particularly among youth who are crucial for future sustainability. Higher education institutions potentially play a significant role in shaping student environmentalism. This study addresses the persistent disconnect between environmental awareness and consistent pro-environmental action among university students. It specifically investigates factors influencing this gap, including the perceived environmental responsibility of the students' university. The study aimed to: (1) Assess university students' environmental knowledge (particularly regarding marine litter), attitudes, and awareness; (2) Identify factors influencing engagement in specific pro-environmental behaviors; (3) Evaluate how perceptions of university environmental responsibility affect student attitudes and behaviors; and (4) Explore perceived barriers and facilitators to environmental action. This research employed a mixed-methods approach with 122 university students. Quantitative survey data measured environmental knowledge (true/false, multiple choice), attitudes (Likert scales, e.g., interest, worry), and self-reported behaviors (e.g., household actions, waste separation). Qualitative data from open-ended questions explored perceptions of barriers, facilitators, and the university's role. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, correlations, t-tests, ANOVA, and regression; thematic analysis was used for qualitative data. Students demonstrated high environmental interest (Mean=4.01/5) and worry (Mean=3.96/5). However, a significant awareness-action gap was evident; for instance, while 81.1% reported using cloth bags, only 39.3% consistently separated household waste. Knowledge varied, with strong understanding of microplastic impacts (89.3% aware of health effects) but misconceptions about local issues (only 41.8% correctly disagreed the Adriatic Sea is clean). Social media emerged as the dominant information source (41%). Crucially, perceived university environmental responsibility significantly influenced student attitudes and behaviors. Qualitative findings highlighted inadequate university infrastructure (e.g., lack of recycling bins, prevalent single-use plastics) as a key barrier. These results underscore universities' critical role in bridging the awareness-action gap. Institutions must actively cultivate environmental responsibility through visible initiatives, improved infrastructure (like accessible recycling), and curriculum integration. Targeted interventions should leverage peer influence, address specific knowledge gaps (e.g., local pollution realities), and translate student concern into tangible, sustainable actions within the campus and community.
format Article
id doaj-art-228558c653e34f3c8d2a58b678845a87
institution Kabale University
issn 3032-7865
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Universitas Andalas
record_format Article
series Journal of Digital Sociohumanities
spelling doaj-art-228558c653e34f3c8d2a58b678845a872025-08-22T12:31:37ZengUniversitas AndalasJournal of Digital Sociohumanities3032-78652025-07-012210.25077/jds.2.2.111-127.2025Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and ActionMohammed El Messaoudi0Mohamed Bouftira1Aboulrhit Lamiae2Moulay Ismail UniversityUniversity of Electronic Science and Technology of China Ibn Tofail University Environmental degradation necessitates urgent action, yet a gap often exists between awareness and behavior, particularly among youth who are crucial for future sustainability. Higher education institutions potentially play a significant role in shaping student environmentalism. This study addresses the persistent disconnect between environmental awareness and consistent pro-environmental action among university students. It specifically investigates factors influencing this gap, including the perceived environmental responsibility of the students' university. The study aimed to: (1) Assess university students' environmental knowledge (particularly regarding marine litter), attitudes, and awareness; (2) Identify factors influencing engagement in specific pro-environmental behaviors; (3) Evaluate how perceptions of university environmental responsibility affect student attitudes and behaviors; and (4) Explore perceived barriers and facilitators to environmental action. This research employed a mixed-methods approach with 122 university students. Quantitative survey data measured environmental knowledge (true/false, multiple choice), attitudes (Likert scales, e.g., interest, worry), and self-reported behaviors (e.g., household actions, waste separation). Qualitative data from open-ended questions explored perceptions of barriers, facilitators, and the university's role. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, correlations, t-tests, ANOVA, and regression; thematic analysis was used for qualitative data. Students demonstrated high environmental interest (Mean=4.01/5) and worry (Mean=3.96/5). However, a significant awareness-action gap was evident; for instance, while 81.1% reported using cloth bags, only 39.3% consistently separated household waste. Knowledge varied, with strong understanding of microplastic impacts (89.3% aware of health effects) but misconceptions about local issues (only 41.8% correctly disagreed the Adriatic Sea is clean). Social media emerged as the dominant information source (41%). Crucially, perceived university environmental responsibility significantly influenced student attitudes and behaviors. Qualitative findings highlighted inadequate university infrastructure (e.g., lack of recycling bins, prevalent single-use plastics) as a key barrier. These results underscore universities' critical role in bridging the awareness-action gap. Institutions must actively cultivate environmental responsibility through visible initiatives, improved infrastructure (like accessible recycling), and curriculum integration. Targeted interventions should leverage peer influence, address specific knowledge gaps (e.g., local pollution realities), and translate student concern into tangible, sustainable actions within the campus and community. https://jds.unand.ac.id/index.php/jds/article/view/28environmental awarenessyouth engagementpro-environmental behavioruniversity responsibilitymixed methodshigher education
spellingShingle Mohammed El Messaoudi
Mohamed Bouftira
Aboulrhit Lamiae
Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
Journal of Digital Sociohumanities
environmental awareness
youth engagement
pro-environmental behavior
university responsibility
mixed methods
higher education
title Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
title_full Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
title_fullStr Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
title_full_unstemmed Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
title_short Youth and the Environment: Assessing Awareness, Attitudes, and Action
title_sort youth and the environment assessing awareness attitudes and action
topic environmental awareness
youth engagement
pro-environmental behavior
university responsibility
mixed methods
higher education
url https://jds.unand.ac.id/index.php/jds/article/view/28
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammedelmessaoudi youthandtheenvironmentassessingawarenessattitudesandaction
AT mohamedbouftira youthandtheenvironmentassessingawarenessattitudesandaction
AT aboulrhitlamiae youthandtheenvironmentassessingawarenessattitudesandaction