Abstract

Environmentally literate teachers are indispensable to sustainably addressing the challenge of poor sanitation and waste mismanagementin less-industrialized countries. In Nigeria, efforts at stemming the trends of urban waste management problems through stringent environmentalregulations of the military in the 1980s have since yielded ways to programs of information, communication and education embeddedin environmental education under current civilian dispensation. This study analyzed attitudes and dispositions of 125 graduatingpre-service teachers, drawn from a Nigerian public university, towards environmental sanitation and waste management within the contextof environmental literacy (EL). The student-teachers were aware of the adverse effects of unsanitary practices. However, they had not embracedenvironmental sanitation practices as part of daily routines or a way of life. While gender and age were not found to be significantlyrelated to pre-service teachers’ EL knowledge and attitude, subject specialization correlated with knowledge just as family background didwith attitude. The study concluded that the current information-sharing approach is not enough to actualize the action-oriented nature ofEL and calls for curricular review to infuse environmental education (EE) concepts, activities, and methods for addressing the existing gapsin teacher education programs in Nigeria.

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