How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity

ABSTRACT Wildlife education has long been critiqued for leaving students entering the workforce deficient in skills such as communication, public relations, and problem solving. This challenge may emerge from both curricula and instructional techniques focused on technical expertise rather than soft...

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Main Authors: Kathryn T. Stevenson, M. Nils Peterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015-12-01
Series:Wildlife Society Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.594
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author Kathryn T. Stevenson
M. Nils Peterson
author_facet Kathryn T. Stevenson
M. Nils Peterson
author_sort Kathryn T. Stevenson
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Wildlife education has long been critiqued for leaving students entering the workforce deficient in skills such as communication, public relations, and problem solving. This challenge may emerge from both curricula and instructional techniques focused on technical expertise rather than soft skills. Researchers have suggested several instructional techniques to address this challenge but have not empirically examined their effectiveness. This study examined how an environmental‐education service‐learning project affected undergraduate wildlife science students' perceptions of education as a possible career and how important they considered education as a wildlife management activity using a pre‐posttreatment comparison between 36 wildlife students at North Carolina State University (Raleigh, NC, USA, during spring 2014) participating in an environmental‐education service‐learning project and 23 wildlife students from the same cohort who were not. In the pretest, few (10.3%) students from either group saw K–12 education as a future career, but most (98.3%) saw education as an important wildlife management activity. Most (82.0%) students also predicted they would need educator skills in their careers, but more females than males saw this as likely. The treatment was positively related to students' belief they would use teaching skills in future careers and that a career in K–12 education would be fulfilling. These results suggest that service‐learning projects may be an effective tool to boost interest in education both as a career and as a wildlife management activity among future wildlife professionals regardless of gender, but that especially high interest among females could provide guidance for training and recruitment efforts attempting to mitigate the gender gap among wildlife professionals. © 2015 The Wildlife Society.
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spelling doaj-art-e2a9cef725cd4317af8d9c571d0860452025-08-20T02:36:23ZengWileyWildlife Society Bulletin2328-55402015-12-0139473273710.1002/wsb.594How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activityKathryn T. Stevenson0M. Nils Peterson1Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology ProgramDepartment of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State UniversityRaleighNC 27695USAFisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology ProgramDepartment of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State UniversityRaleighNC 27695USAABSTRACT Wildlife education has long been critiqued for leaving students entering the workforce deficient in skills such as communication, public relations, and problem solving. This challenge may emerge from both curricula and instructional techniques focused on technical expertise rather than soft skills. Researchers have suggested several instructional techniques to address this challenge but have not empirically examined their effectiveness. This study examined how an environmental‐education service‐learning project affected undergraduate wildlife science students' perceptions of education as a possible career and how important they considered education as a wildlife management activity using a pre‐posttreatment comparison between 36 wildlife students at North Carolina State University (Raleigh, NC, USA, during spring 2014) participating in an environmental‐education service‐learning project and 23 wildlife students from the same cohort who were not. In the pretest, few (10.3%) students from either group saw K–12 education as a future career, but most (98.3%) saw education as an important wildlife management activity. Most (82.0%) students also predicted they would need educator skills in their careers, but more females than males saw this as likely. The treatment was positively related to students' belief they would use teaching skills in future careers and that a career in K–12 education would be fulfilling. These results suggest that service‐learning projects may be an effective tool to boost interest in education both as a career and as a wildlife management activity among future wildlife professionals regardless of gender, but that especially high interest among females could provide guidance for training and recruitment efforts attempting to mitigate the gender gap among wildlife professionals. © 2015 The Wildlife Society.https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.594environmental educationgenderhuman dimensionsservice learningsoft skillswildlife education
spellingShingle Kathryn T. Stevenson
M. Nils Peterson
How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
Wildlife Society Bulletin
environmental education
gender
human dimensions
service learning
soft skills
wildlife education
title How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
title_full How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
title_fullStr How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
title_full_unstemmed How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
title_short How experiential service‐learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
title_sort how experiential service learning affects student perceptions of education in their careers and as a wildlife management activity
topic environmental education
gender
human dimensions
service learning
soft skills
wildlife education
url https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.594
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