Abstract

Interest is an important factor for successful learning that has been the subject of intensive research for decades. Although interest in nature is of great importance for environmental education, to date there is no valid and reliable measurement tool. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to develop and test a scale for interest in nature, the Nature Interest Scale (NIS). In study 1, nine items were selected based on the three dimensions of the psychological interest construct to represent interest in nature. The factor structure of this new measurement instrument, was tested using confirmatory factor analyses. The results show that the instrument represents the three dimensions of the interest construct well. In study 2 the validity (discriminant and convergent validity) as well as the reliability (internal consistency, composite reliability, test-retest reliability) of the NIS were demonstrated. In study 3, the applicability of the NIS was tested with a different target group, students with learning disabilities. The results of this factor analysis also confirm the factor structure of the scale. Thus, this study provides a valid and reliable measurement tool for individual interest in nature that can be used for future research.

Highlights

  • Introduction“interest” is often seen as motivation to learn more about a topic

  • In everyday language, “interest” is often seen as motivation to learn more about a topic

  • Current research often uses instruments that have not been tested for their psychological quality or do not adequately cover the construct of interest (Rowland et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

“interest” is often seen as motivation to learn more about a topic. Interest has been an important topic in pedagogy and educational research for a long time: For example, the educator Dewey recognized the importance of interest more than 100 years ago (Dewey, 1913). Interest in educational psychology is often described as a dynamic relationship between a person and an object of interest (Person-Object-Theory of Interest; Krapp, 1993, 1998, 2000). Such an object of interest can be, for example, a topic, an idea, an activity, an event or some other content of a person’s cognitive life space (Krapp, 2002)

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