Education as a tool for addressing the extinction crisis: Moving students from understanding to action

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Abstract

Human activity is leading to mass species extinctions worldwide. Conservation biology (CB) courses, taught worldwide at universities, typically focus on the proximal causes of extinction without teaching students how to respond to this crisis. The Extinction of Species 360 course has been taught yearly each fall semester to several hundred students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for over two decades. In 2007 the instructor and five teaching assistants combined principles driving extinctions, based on traditional lectures and discussion sections, with action-oriented education targeting individual consumer habits, to a group of 285 students. Students learn the science underpinning conservation efforts, as evidenced by highly significant learning (

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Moyer-Horner, L., Kirby, R., & Vaughan, C. (2010). Education as a tool for addressing the extinction crisis: Moving students from understanding to action. Revista de Biologia Tropical, 58(4), 1115–1126. https://doi.org/10.15517/rbt.v58i4.5397

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