Sustainability Learning in Education for Sustainable Development for 2030: An Observational Study Regarding Environmental Psychology and Responsible Behavior through Rural Community Travel
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Sustainability Learning and ESD for 2030
2.2. Effects of Environmental Psychology on Sustainability Learning
2.3. Effects of Sustainability Learning on Environmental Responsible Behavior
2.4. Conceptual Framework of Sustainability Learning
- Sustainability learning: Understanding the design of a learning activity can support ESD for 2030 [5]. The learning activity should take place for learners of all ages, who are living stakeholders, and travel to the community must be encouraged. Notably, all learners must learn sustainable development within a local context. The local context must be a community that can represent the region’s characteristic environmental, sociocultural, and economic circumstances.
- Environmental psychology: This concerns understanding what people perceive as environmental learning, and the learning process should be observed or dialogued [29] through the human senses (see, hear, touch, taste, or smell). The reaction of the human sense was used to indicate the people’s feelings. These feelings included environmental cognition [39], emotion (happy or unhappy), attention [24], human involvement [40], and motivation [23,41].
- Responsible behavior change: This point concerns understanding how people engage in personal or group learning activities [42]. The main point in the learning activity may not be an immediate action but concerning a possible or implemented pro-environment behavior within social relationships [32]. Notably, social relationships connect to living stakeholders in responsible behavior. The responsible behavior of stakeholders creates more opportunities to overcome future crises of climate change.
3. Case Study Methodology
Observational studies on behavior in the environment settings with different functions are included from recreational to service or connecting. Moreover, both natural and built environments (indoor and outdoor) are found. Visitors/customers are the typical population investigated, frequently through field experiments or studies in which observation emerges as a fundamental method for data collection.
4. Result and Discussion
4.1. Effect of Environmental Psychology on Sustainability Learning
I knew that the residents living in the Wanlaun Township followed Buddhism and Taoism, but an interesting thing here (Wanjin village) is that the residents changed their religion to become Catholic. I really did not know that Wanjin Basilica was the oldest Catholic church in Taiwan. The church was built using local black soil, carbon, and honey. All building materials were natural. This is why this church has a critical value today. I thought that the Wanjin Basilica played an important role in rural sustainable development, because for a long time, it was not acceptable for outsiders to visit the church, but the missionaries were patient and cared for poor people (children, older, and women), and then can stay. I believe that the Wanjin Basilica has become a social-cultural center in the minds of the local residents. They have love and tolerance, want to support the sustainable development of their community, and engage with people of different religions and cultures, while embracing environmental sustainability.(Male, 55 years old, retired tour guide)
4.2. Effect of Sustainability Learning on Responsible Behavior Change
I am Malaysian, and I was married in Taiwan ten years ago. Because my husband’s father and mother were older than before, we returned here for cocoa farming. I knew the importance and value of cocoa because in my home country, cocoa was an agriculture produce. There are many nutritional elements in and specific benefits from cocoa, but not many people know about it. I said to my husband, “I am willing to return home”, even though it was a countryside and not convenient like northern Taiwan. Therefore, I decided to return here, but my husband still works in northern Taiwan, in Taoyuan City. Why did I use an environment-friendly approach? I thought that non-toxic farming or not using modern pesticides was difficult, but I realized that I should protect our environment, and ensure the safety of all my customers and myself. Although, non-toxic farming was hard work, I must pay more effort to weed something I did not want, because it has more benefits for me and my customers. One concern was about my health: because I am so young, I did not want to die because I used pesticides. Another concern was for my customers. Therefore, I farmed and worked for a healthy business; there was no point in working while compromising one’s health; that was not my style. Therefore, I combined many sources and concepts from my home country, and developed a new brand of chocolate to serve this big marketplace, but only one thing was that I did not know how to offer my place for sustainability learning. Fortunately, the cocoa cultural industry festival gave me the opportunity to show my farm. In this year, 2021, my farm and workroom have initiated tours to provide farm education and experience activities. It was interesting not only to teach students and tourists but also to learn a lot from our guests”.(Female, 45 years old, owner of a small cocoa farm)
4.3. Importance of Rural Community Travel in Sustainability Learning
- Destination: The destination plays a central role in the entire supply chain, connects with upstream and downstream learning activities, and creates a community with respect to the sustainable development and environmental education of a local place. As a sustainable tourism [60], the travel process really enhanced sustainability learning because it provided an environmental, sociocultural, and economic context that was immersive for learners of all ages. Therefore, the rural community supported the sustainability learning goal of ESD for 2030.
- Supply side: The scope of this parameter is to promote business-to-business (B2B) sustainability learning, while ensuring the cooperation of all local suppliers to provide cultural ecosystem services [61]. Cultural ecosystem services are service providers that should consider what low-carbon services or products can be provided to the customers. The learning objective in this area concerns environmental conservation and corporate social responsibility [62]. The major reason for this is that, generally, in a rural setting, the supply side mainly consists more small and medium-sized enterprises. These enterprises are the sources or materials of agricultural food production, and their products are more concerned about human health and food safety.
- Demand side: The scope of this parameter is to promote business-to-customer (B2C) sustainability learning, which focuses on the tourist’s responsible behavior. Pro-environmental behavior should be fostered because most tourists are not only consumers or end users but also key stakeholders in sustainability. A major reason is that tourists bring or create garbage and sometimes waste natural resources, such as water, energy, or food. Notably, if human behavior [36,37] cannot transition toward responsibility, the goal of ESD for 2030 will be difficult to achieve.
5. Conclusions and Limitations
5.1. Educational and Managerial Implications
5.2. Methodology Limitations and Suggestions for Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Destination | Time of Stay (min) | Main Learning Purpose | Data Collection |
---|---|---|---|
Wanjin Basilica | 50 | The Wanjin Basilica is the oldest Catholic church in Taiwan. The learning objective was to understand how the Wanjin Basilica assists local religious development. | Dialogues with 20 tourists, 100 photographs taken, and 10 videos |
Wugoshuei Community | 50 | The community is the biggest traditional Hakka cultural settlement in the country. The learning objective was to understand how ethnic settlements can add value to eco-tourism in a place and promote cultural and heritage conservation. | Dialogues with 30 tourists, 138 photographs taken, and 10 videos |
DiRaja Chocolate | 50 | Wanlaun Township has become an important place for cocoa cultivation. The learning objective was to visit a farm that provides low-carbon service for tourists during their “experience” process. | Dialogues with 15 tourists, 217 photographs taken, and 12 videos |
Psychological Factor | Sustainability Learning from Evidence |
---|---|
Environmental cognition [39] | Participants felt the rural cultural experiences were meaningful. In the three places, participants identified differences that demonstrated cognition [39]. For example, learners understood that the historical building is important and determined that it should be protected. (Stated by a 65-year-old mother) |
Emotion [51] | Participants showed emotions on their face and in their behavior. One family said that “we are very happy because we never knew why our community had those interesting places, even though we live close to them. We appreciate your interpretation on this tour” and “We are willing to attend the next tour this afternoon. It makes us very relaxed when the tour takes us on a slow walk. (Stated by a female; the peoples’ ages are 12, 24, 30, and 70 years old) |
Attention [24] | Participants’ attention is focused on eye contact. On all three tours, all the attendees paid attention to the interpretation. Figure 2b showed the attention of attendees. All the attendees were following tour guide and their directions. One crucial piece of evidence is that no one leaves the tour early and many attendees even participated twice. (Stated by two females; the administrators of the Wanlaun Township Office) |
Human involvement [40] | A place enhances human involvement. Outdoor activity has played an important role in this way. One participant said that “we are residents but we did not know the story of the Church, nor what the cocoa festival activity is, but through your interpreting I now know what cultural heritage is and why agricultural culture can be an experience economy. (Stated by a couple; aged 25 and 26 years old) |
Motivation [23,41] | Motivation, in this case, was shown in various. One way is that all the participants are very happy. Moreover, 99% responded that they willing attend again (as stated by the administrators of the Wanlaun Township Office). Additionally, motivation to support small businesses can be shown through increased orders for a small cocoa farm after the tour (as stated by the cocoa farm owner). The final way is reflected in the environmental education; all attendees said to the researcher that it was a wonderful learning activity. One group stated, “We came from the center of Taiwan (Taichung City), and we did not know why a famous place has different and interesting activities. We learned a lot of information from you and thank you very much”. (Stated by three elderly females aged 75, 78, and 82 years old) |
Community’s Stakeholders | The Responsible Behavior Change |
---|---|
The service providers |
|
The participants |
|
The residents | A resident can be a protector or spoiler in sustainable development. After the festival, many residents recognized that “my place is a good place”. Before, they did not feel the specific value of the traditional language and cultural buildings, but they changed attitudes and behavior after the activity. Some even cared about the river or brook and appealed for protective actions. |
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Chen, F.-H.; Tsai, C.-C.; Chung, P.-Y.; Lo, W.-S. Sustainability Learning in Education for Sustainable Development for 2030: An Observational Study Regarding Environmental Psychology and Responsible Behavior through Rural Community Travel. Sustainability 2022, 14, 2779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052779
Chen F-H, Tsai C-C, Chung P-Y, Lo W-S. Sustainability Learning in Education for Sustainable Development for 2030: An Observational Study Regarding Environmental Psychology and Responsible Behavior through Rural Community Travel. Sustainability. 2022; 14(5):2779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052779
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Fang-Hua, Chang-Ching Tsai, Pei-Yin Chung, and Wei-Shuo Lo. 2022. "Sustainability Learning in Education for Sustainable Development for 2030: An Observational Study Regarding Environmental Psychology and Responsible Behavior through Rural Community Travel" Sustainability 14, no. 5: 2779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052779
APA StyleChen, F.-H., Tsai, C.-C., Chung, P.-Y., & Lo, W.-S. (2022). Sustainability Learning in Education for Sustainable Development for 2030: An Observational Study Regarding Environmental Psychology and Responsible Behavior through Rural Community Travel. Sustainability, 14(5), 2779. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14052779