scholarly journals Measuring Connection to Nature—A Illustrated Extension of the Inclusion of Nature in Self Scale

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1761
Author(s):  
Matthias Winfried Kleespies ◽  
Tina Braun ◽  
Paul Wilhelm Dierkes ◽  
Volker Wenzel

The human-nature connection is an important factor that is frequently the subject of environmental education research and environmental psychology. Therefore, over the years, numerous measuring instruments have been established to quantitatively record a person’s connection to nature. However, there is no instrument specifically for children with cognitive limitations. For this reason, in this study, an established scale for connection to nature, the inclusion of nature in self scale (INS), was modified especially for the needs of this group. Study 1 investigated what students understand by the term “nature” in order to create an illustrated version of the INS. In study 2, the new instrument was tested on university students and compared with the original INS and the connectedness to nature scale (CNS). No significant differences between the original INS and the new developed scale were found (p = 0.247), from which it can be concluded that the illustrated INS (IINS) measures the connection to nature with similar accuracy as the original INS. In study 3, the instrument was tested together with other established nature connection instruments on the actual target group, students with disabilities. The correlation between the IINS, the CNS, and nature connectedness scale (NR) were in accordance with the expected literature values (rIINS-CNS = 0.570 & rIINS-NR = 0.605). The results of this study also prove effectiveness of the developed illustrated scale. This research thus provides a suitable measuring instrument for people with learning difficulties and can make a contribution to the investigation of human-nature connections and conservation education.

2021 ◽  
Vol 65 ◽  
pp. 127350
Author(s):  
Julietta Sorensen Kass ◽  
Peter N. Duinker ◽  
Melanie Zurba ◽  
Michael Smit

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Iris Berent

Remy, the Harvard Humanities cat, spends his days amidst Harvard’s academic towers, blissfully oblivious to his intellectual surroundings. It is obvious to us that Remy suffers certain cognitive limitations of which he is entirely unaware. After all, we are humans, whereas Remy was born a cat. That a pet might experience a certain level of cognitive blindness is an idea we accept with equanimity. But we are far less comfortable with the thought that we might suffer from similar cognitive limitations ourselves. Logic, however, compels us to entertain this as a distinct possibility. Having recognized that biology can innately limit other species’ cognitions and that we too are biological kinds, blindness could very well obscure human minds. Fear of blindness goes throughout our intellectual history all the way to the ancient Greeks. In this book, we see that, just as the Greek feared, we are oblivion to our own human nature, and our blindness is in our fate. It emanates from human nature itself.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (15) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aisyah Abu Bakar ◽  
Siti Indati Mustapa ◽  
Norsyahida Mohammad

Interaction with Nature [IN] refers to the urge or preference to be close to the natural environment, attentiveness and knowledge of the natural environment, and health associated attributes in relation to surroundings. Issue: Since the vision of green city was introduced, Melaka has made great strides toward building a sustainable, green city. With the ongoing development towards reduction of carbon intensity 2020, IN of Melaka public needs to be evaluated to determine the human-nature connection with respect to the green initiative efforts. Purpose: This paper aims to compare the IN of Melaka residents to residents of other states in Malaysia. Approach: One-Way MANOVA was generated to determine the mean distribution of 10 IN items, across Malaysia States. Findings: There were significant differences within subjects of the 10 IN items between-subjects of Malaysia States. The Post-Hoc Test indicated majority of the means of IN items for Melaka were significantly higher than other states. However, in relation to other states, Melaka was slightly shy on (i) IN2, being able to recall experiences in the natural environment, and (ii) IN5, being able to notice scientific details of nature.


Author(s):  
Hill and

Human beings are not psychologically well-equipped to prepare for the impacts of climate change. We are not good at dealing with dangers we have trouble picturing in our minds, and we often succumb to excessive optimism. Human beings are also reluctant to pay short-term costs that are certain in exchange for future, uncertain benefits. Given the enormity of the climate resilience challenge, this chapter outlines how citizens are at risk of feeling overwhelmed and therefore paralyzed by the scope of the problem. If we are going to build resilience to climate change successfully, it argues, we are going to have to work around these cognitive limitations. Human nature is hard, if not impossible to change, so it is best to deploy a variety of approaches and “nudges” that work with human nature, not against it.


2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel R. Hodge ◽  
Nathan M. Murata ◽  
Francis M. Kozub

The purpose was to develop an instrument for use in physical education teacher education (PETE) programs that would yield valid evidence of the judgments of PETE preservice teachers toward the inclusion of students with disabilities into general physical education classes. Both the conceptualization that judgments represent the cognitive expressions of attitudes (Ajzen, 2001; Sherif & Hovland, 1961) and focus group discussions were used to create the Physical Educators’ Judgments About Inclusion (PEJI) instrument. Following content validation procedures, we administered PEJI to 272 PETE preservice teachers. Subsequent principal component analysis to generate construct validity evidence indicated 15 items should be retained; they collectively explained 53% of the variance using a three-component model. Dimensions of the PEJI pertained to judgments about inclusion, acceptance, and perceived training needs. Alpha coefficients for the three subscales ranged from .64 to .88.


2021 ◽  
pp. 126110
Author(s):  
Dante Francomano ◽  
Mayra I. Rodríguez González ◽  
Alejandro E.J. Valenzuela ◽  
Zhao Ma ◽  
Andrea N. Raya Rey ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-121
Author(s):  
Andreas Breden

These notes accompany two films that I have made. They are an attempt to punctuate why my connection to nature is so important to me and try to find a way to share this. I write attempt because I believe that we as human beings are ever-evolving, ever-revealing and ever-growing, and so is our relationship and connection to nature. It’s not a circular movement, but more like a spiraling one which adds one more dimension. We come back to places that are familiar but slightly different.  What can we co-learn from lighting a campfire?  https://youtu.be/NyBPVkhQjOY Following a stream towards the sea  https://youtu.be/r7W7vF2dqzI


2017 ◽  
Vol 26-27 ◽  
pp. 106-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher D Ives ◽  
Matteo Giusti ◽  
Joern Fischer ◽  
David J Abson ◽  
Kathleen Klaniecki ◽  
...  

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