Abstract

This article reports on an interdisciplinary evaluation of the pilot phase of a community-driven civic science project. The project investigates the distribution of heavy metals in air pollution using moss growing on street trees as a bio-indicator in two industrial-adjacent neighborhoods in Seattle, Washington (USA). One goal of the ongoing project is to meaningfully engage local urban youths (eighth to twelfth grade) in the scientific process as civic scientists, and teach them about environmental health, environmental justice, and urban forestry concepts in a place-based, urban-oriented environmental research project. We describe the collaborative context in which our project developed, evaluate the quality of youth-collected data through analysis of replicate samples, and assess participants’ learning, career interests, and overall appraisal of the pilot. Our results indicate that youth scientists collected usable samples (with acceptable precision among repeated samples), learned project content (with statistically significant increases in scores of test-style survey questions; p = 0.002), and appraised their engagement favorably (with 69% of participants reporting they liked the project). We observed few changes in career interests, however. We discuss our intention to use these preliminary insights to further our community-driven education, research, and action model to address environmental injustices.

Highlights

  • Environmental health, environmental justice, environmental education, community-based participatory action research, youth engagement, and civic science share considerable common ground, Int

  • We explore the following interdisciplinary questions: Can trained youth scientists collect and prepare moss samples that are useable in an environmental health civic science project? Was our community-driven science approach a positive and effective forum for youth environmental learning and experiences? Did it inspire interests in environmental or community leadership opportunities?

  • We present our findings on youth experiences from our surveys

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental health, environmental justice, environmental education, community-based participatory action research, youth engagement, and civic science share considerable common ground, Int. J. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 7278 yet are rarely addressed concurrently in the scientific literature. Public Health 2020, 17, 7278 yet are rarely addressed concurrently in the scientific literature Their shared stake in consequential issues includes access to, and interactions with, the benefits and hazards of the environments in which people live, work, learn, and play. Scholars have called for research on environmental health disparities to be better contextualized within their cultural, socioeconomic, and behavioral circumstances, and rooted in community processes [2,3]. Civic science has shown the ability to harness the power of lay individuals to contribute to scientific discovery, though it has more often been applied to basic ecological monitoring than community-driven environmental justice research. Its success is still mainly measured in terms of data quality, rather than participant or community outcomes [8,9]

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