Abstract

This paper explores the value of cooperative games in enhancing knowledge and generating pro-environmental engagement in students. For this, an educational board game related to global change was developed, validated, and subsequently evaluated using future primary school teachers. The board game was validated and evaluated in two phases. Phase I (validation phase): students pursuing a Master’s Degree in Secondary Education evaluated different aspects of the game, providing feedback that improved the game design and playing rules. Phase II (implementation–evaluation phase): the game was implemented using students of the Primary Education Degree, whose learning performance and engagement was assessed through a qualitative survey. These participants were considered potential users of the board game. The users’ experience was explored using a theoretical framework for pro-environmental engagement through playing the game. The findings demonstrate that the cooperative game proposed fomented a feeling of personal responsibility for the environment in the users. It also fostered cognitive, emotional, and behavioural engagement in the players. The results agree with the attributes present in the framework of engagement with respect to climate-change-related issues using gaming. Game-based learning can be used as a tool for enhancing global change knowledge and promoting pro-environmental engagement while bolstering Education for Sustainability (EfS) capacity in future primary-school teachers.

Highlights

  • According to Bamberg [4] an important precursor of pro-environmental action is a feeling of personal responsibility for the environment—which involves being aware of how one’s actions negatively impact nature

  • This paper explores the role of game-based learning in expanding knowledge and fostering pro-environmental engagement

  • We have considered the concept of engagement as used in climate change research, that proposed by Lorenzoni et al [37], who defines engagement with climate change as the individual evaluation of and response to climate change which comprises cognitive, emotional and behavioural components

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Summary

Introduction

Programmes such as the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development have made global calls to teach about the global environmental crisis, in order to encourage changes in knowledge, values, and attitudes with the vision of building a more sustainable and fairer society for all. According to Bamberg [4] an important precursor of pro-environmental action is a feeling of personal responsibility for the environment—which involves being aware of how one’s actions negatively impact nature Such personal environmental norms have been shown to predict pro-environmental behavior, such as choosing sustainable modes of travel [5] and preserving marine environments [6]. EfS needs to be established as a key purpose of scholarly education but ensuring good teacher training in EfS is a major challenge [7,8,9]

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