Abstract

Environmental concerns are obstacles that all humans should confront. Accordingly, Taiwan has incorporated environmental education into its curriculum guidelines; however, difficulties have been encountered in its implementation because Taiwanese society clings to the concept of credentialism, students cannot focus in class, and course content is too abstract. Virtual reality (VR) techniques have been incorporated into the field of education for years; because they can increase the interestingness of learning and also concretely present matters through gamification, the present study applied VR techniques to resolve the aforementioned difficulties. VR can build environments and situations that would be impossible to visit in the real world, e.g., travel inside a human body, or the physically impossible—the surface of Mars. The aim was to increase students’ immersion in class would generate empathy toward the natural environment and perform actual behaviors to protect it. In terms of the experimental design, gender and teaching methods were defined as independent variables, and observation and questionnaires were conducted and applied to examine students’ immersion, empathy, and behaviors after learning. Participants in the experimental group watched a 3D video through a semi-immersive VR device, whereas those in the control group watched an ordinary video accompanied by an explanation from the teacher. The numbers of male and female students were equally allocated, and the learning outcomes of the two groups were further examined. A two-way multivariate analysis of variance test was conducted to examine the influences of 2(genders) × 2(teaching methods) on students’ immersion, empathy, and actual behaviors and also mainly to inspect whether the differences between genders and teaching methods resulted in a direct influence or interaction. The experimental results revealed that the effectiveness of the application of VR techniques is affected by gender; female students presented more favorable performance in both empathy and actual behaviors. In brief, VR techniques can generally enhance students’ learning outcomes; however, limitations such as the cost of VR devices and material designs should also be considered.

Highlights

  • Taiwan’s Grade 1–9 (K-12) Curriculum Guidelines stated that environmental education is the process of concept perception and value clarification; it aims to equip students with the skills and attitude required for exploring and appreciating the interactive relationship between humans, cultures, animals, and physical environments

  • Reliability and validity tests were first implemented from the aspects of the three variables of immersion, empathy, and actual behaviors based on the data obtained from the questionnaires

  • The results revealed that compared with students who received conventional didactic teaching and viewed an ordinary video, the students who experienced the 3D Virtual reality (VR) teaching approach presented a significant difference in terms of learning absorption; those who experienced the VR teaching approach performed with significantly higher immersion during the 30min course

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Summary

Introduction

Taiwan’s Grade 1–9 (K-12) Curriculum Guidelines stated that environmental education is the process of concept perception and value clarification; it aims to equip students with the skills and attitude required for exploring and appreciating the interactive relationship between humans, cultures, animals, and physical environments. Didactic teaching is the most applied method in Taiwan’s education system; teachers deliver lectures “on stage” while students learn “off stage.”. Such a deep-rooted educational method is more efficient, yet it can lower students’ willingness to learn because of disturbances or difficulty concentrating, and they may not be able to memorize the content they were taught over a long period of time. Even when students understand the situation of animal extinction or what instant dangers such environmental changes may cause to people, they do not develop a sense of empathy, let alone perform actual behaviors to protect the environment

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