We are pleased to invite you to join us for the MS Defense Seminar of Sophie Maksymkiw, titled, “Where Roots Run Deep: Fostering Youth Environmental Motivation Through Livelihoods in Rural Place-Based Education”
- Date: Thursday, May 15, 2025
- Time: 2:00 – 3:00 PM MST
- Location: Biology 134, Colorado State University
- Zoom link: col.st/IEiK3
- Meeting ID: 947 4295 9701
- Passcode: 868362
Sophie’s research explores how secondary student environmental motivation is affected by engagement with a module that intersects the topics of participatory science, pollinator-plant response to climate change, and data literacy. Through the implementation of the module in both rural and suburban areas, she contextualized how local livelihoods may fit into place-based education.
This seminar will be of interest to anyone curious about climate change education, community engagement, pollinator-plant interactions, and the importance of context in education.
Sophie is a Master’s candidate in the Graduate Degree Program in Ecology at Colorado State University, advised by Dr. Meena Balgopal.
We hope you’ll attend and support her as she presents this important work.
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Abstract
“As youth stare into the beast of climate change, it is important for them to be prepared and feel agentic in attacking the hurdles of climate change. Youth students will be among the most affected by climate change in the future, however, due to the current political state of the US and the lack in access to climate change curricular materials, teaching climate comes with a few challenges especially in rural school districts. Additionally, youth in the US are less likely to be motivated in comparison to youth in other countries. To target student environmental science motivation in an intermountain west region of the US, we grounded this study in Situated Expectancy Value Theory where we investigated how values, identity, and expectations of success contribute to motivation. We designed a Place-Based Education (PBE) climate change module where students engaged with participatory science data framed around phenological changes that are occurring to their local bumble bees and plants. Students of two middle school teachers, one in a suburban school (n=56) and one in a rural school (n=42) implemented the module. To measure the effects of environmental motivation from the module, students took pre and post surveys. We found that identity increased in suburban students and values decreased in rural students after interacting with the module. Motivation in rural students started out lower and ended lower in comparison to suburban students. These differences revealed that rural students should engage in community action following a PBE environmental to avoid potential disempowerment. Through environmental contextualization of the two populations, we found a difference in experiences, knowledge types, and differing scopes of powerlessness between the two teachers, highlighting how the rural region experiences the environment more directly, leading to an effect on their livelihoods. These results suggest that livelihood validation and community environmental actions as promising integrations to rural curricula. ”
