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Factors Influencing Primary School Children’s Knowledge of Wildlife

 
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Short Description:
This study examined children's knowledge of wildlife by showing them a series of animal pictures and asking three questions: 1. What is this animal? 2. What does it eat? and 3. Where does it live? The authors found that, in general, school-aged children lacked knowledge of wildlife species, even those that were common and indigenous. The authors suggest this supports a need for more wildlife education in schools.

Abstract:
Article Abstract:
"We examined the wildlife knowledge of primary (aged 4–12) schoolchildren. In particular, we examined the effects of children's age and gender, as well as the taxonomy and origin (indigenous versus exotic) of wildlife, on the degree of knowledge about different species.We used illustrated ‘flashcards’ of mammals, birds and arthropods, drawn randomly from a species pool. Each indigenous example was paired with an exotic animal. Wildlife knowledge overall increased steadily with age, although the ability to identify species peaked at age 9 then declined slightly."
"Boys had significantly greater wildlife knowledge than girls, and children of both sexes identified more indigenous than exotic species. Knowledge of mammals was significantly better than that of birds and arthropods. Knowledge of some very common indigenous species, such as sparrow and earwig, was poor.We conclude that the potential for primary school wildlife education using common and easily accessible species of birds and arthropods is not fully realised, and that girls in particular lack knowledge of local species."

Spot Check Number: 1914
Sponsor: Napier University
Researcher/Author: Mark Huxhama, Angela Welsha, Alice Berrya & Stuart Templetona
Animal Type: Human, Wildlife
Record Type: Academic Paper, Journal Article, Research Study
Research Method: In Person Interview/Survey
Geographic Region: International
Population Descriptors: Children
Year Conducted: 2010
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Sad Day

It is a sad day to learn that our children don't have a clue to who animals are outside of cartoons. We have to do something about this as individuals and as a society.

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