Abstract

Societal Impact StatementPlants underpin our society providing food, fuel, medicines, clean air and water, positive mental health, and are central to biodiversity conservation. Despite this importance and an increasing need for people with plant‐identification skills, many societies are becoming increasingly ignorant to the species with which they interact. To benefit both our undergraduates and the society they will enter, we applied mobile technology to improve plant identification and appreciation, while providing opportunities to practice transferable team work and verbal communication skills. Encouraging 'plant vision' will improve conservation efforts while increasing personal connections with green spaces, leading to mental health improvements for society. Summary Despite the importance of plants to human civilization, many societies are becoming increasingly ignorant to the plants that inhabit their surrounding environment. A phenomenon known as ‘plant blindness’. To address plant blindness in undergraduate students we designed an outdoor activity using a mobile phone app. Our aims were to identify the level of ‘plant blindness’ in our students; investigate engagement with the app and activity; determine if we can raise awareness of links between lecture content and real world scenarios; and assess the student experience as a result of the activity in large classes. The app chosen was ActionBound. Students were asked to find and photograph local examples of four plant families, along with identifying physiological benefits of features covered in lectures. Two different first year classes were exposed to this activity – Plant Science and Life on Earth. The Plant Science students (60% success rate for three families; 55 students) were less plant blind than Life on Earth students (less than 44% success rate in any of the four families; 200 students). Students engaged well with the activity with all groups submitting sensible attempts at the responses. Most students reported that the activity increased links to lecture material and all but one student reported positive experiences. Our students found the treasure hunt learning environment is a fun way to engage with the plant topics covered in lectures. In future iterations, we will more explicitly explain the links to potential careers and will address some of the logistical challenges faced in this first cohort.

Highlights

  • Plants underpin everything that human societies are built on: food, fuel, medicines, clean air and water, carbon sinks, mental health, and are central to the preservation of biodiversity

  • Surveys were kept separate but the questions were identical for both Plant Science and Life on Earth (Table 1)

  • The demonstrators from Plant Science demonstrated for Life on Earth and all were sent an anonymous survey (SurveyMonkey) after each practical (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Plants underpin everything that human societies are built on: food, fuel, medicines, clean air and water, carbon sinks, mental health, and are central to the preservation of biodiversity. While there are observable differences in how people visually process animals and plants (Balas & Momsen, 2014), this innate discrepancy is frequently reinforced by educational curricula, and how they are implemented in the classroom (Balas & Momsen, 2014; Balding & Williams, 2016). Even though children may recognise the importance of plants, they often fail to find them in‐ teresting (Fančovičová & Prokop, 2010). Given this background, it is perhaps unsurprising that plant blindness results in heavy conserva‐ tion biases towards animals (Balding & Williams, 2016). Because of the importance of plants to our societies and for biodiversity conser‐ vation, it is crucial that we find ways to address this situation

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