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Featured researches published by Rebecca M. Colvin.


Journal of Geography in Higher Education | 2017

Enhancing critical thinking skills in first year environmental management students: a tale of curriculum design, application and reflection

Dona Whiley; Bradd Witt; Rebecca M. Colvin; Rodolfo Sapiains Arrué; Julius H. Kotir

Abstract This paper chronicles the experience of academic staff in developing a course to enhance the critical thinking skills of environmental management undergraduates. We outline our considerations and process for course development, discuss insights from course evaluations, and reflect on the challenges encountered. We believe these perspectives will be useful for others who are developing critical thinking skills curricula, especially first year courses. Aspects of the course design which were considered particularly effective were the use of scaffolded assessment, the application of threshold concepts, and well-structured collaborative learning activities paired with quality tutors. The key learning for the authors from the evaluation of the course was that while the tools and strategies developed were very useful, interweaving these tools into year 2 and 3 courses would help students see the ongoing value of critical thinking in their work.


bioRxiv | 2018

Opinions of 12 to 13-year-olds in Austria and Australia on the worry, cause and imminence of Climate Change

Inez E Harker-Schuch; Frank Mills; Steven J. Lade; Rebecca M. Colvin

Although we are in the third decade of climate science communication as a discipline, and there is overwhelming scientific consensus and physical evidence for climate change, the general public continues to wrestle with climate change policy and advocacy. Early adolescence (12 to 13 years old) is a critical but under-researched demographic for the formation of attitudes related to climate change. This paper presents opinions on the worry, cause, and imminence of climate change that were collected from n=463 1st year secondary school students (12-13 years old) in public secondary schools in inner-urban centres in Austria and Australia. Overall, 86.83% of eligible respondents agreed that climate change was probably or definitely something we should worry about, 80.33% agreed that climate change was probably or definitely caused by humans, and 83.17% agreed that climate change was probably or definitely something that was happening now. The respondents’ opinions were also compared to their respective adult population, with Australian 12-13 year olds showing strong positive climate-friendly attitudes, both in comparison to their adult population, and to their Austrian peers. In addition, although the opinions of Austrian 12-13 year olds were quite high, they did not reflect the higher climate-friendly opinions of their adult community. Our results suggest that socio-cultural worldview or socio-cultural cognition theory may not have the influence on this age group as it does on the respective adult population – and, if they are affected, there are attitudes or factors in this age group which resist the opinion-influence from their mature community. These findings are significant as early adolescents may be pivotal in the climate science communication arena and investigating their opinions with regard to climate change may offer an unexplored and under-utilised target for future communication efforts and climate literacy programmes.


Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2015

The social identity approach to understanding socio-political conflict in environmental and natural resources management

Rebecca M. Colvin; G. Bradd Witt; Justine Lacey


Land Use Policy | 2016

Approaches to identifying stakeholders in environmental management: Insights from practitioners to go beyond the ‘usual suspects’

Rebecca M. Colvin; G. Bradd Witt; Justine Lacey


Land Use Policy | 2015

Strange bedfellows or an aligning of values? Exploration of stakeholder values in an alliance of concerned citizens against coal seam gas mining

Rebecca M. Colvin; G. Bradd Witt; Justine Lacey


Energy Policy | 2016

How wind became a four-letter word: Lessons for community engagement from a wind energy conflict in King Island, Australia

Rebecca M. Colvin; G. Bradd Witt; Justine Lacey


Nature Climate Change | 2018

Understanding and managing trust at the climate science–policy interface

Justine Lacey; Mark Howden; Christopher Cvitanovic; Rebecca M. Colvin


Sustainability Science | 2018

Boundary spanning at the science–policy interface: the practitioners’ perspectives

A. T. Bednarek; Carina Wyborn; Christopher Cvitanovic; R. Meyer; Rebecca M. Colvin; P. F. E. Addison; S. L. Close; K. Curran; M. Farooque; E. Goldman; D. Hart; H. Mannix; B. McGreavy; A. Parris; S. Posner; C. Robinson; M. Ryan; Pb Leith


Case Studies in the Environment | 2018

Using a Community Vote for Wind Energy Development Decision-Making in King Island, Tasmania

Rebecca M. Colvin; G. Bradd Witt; Justine Lacey


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018

Large-scale environmental degradation results in inequitable impacts to already impoverished communities: A case study from the floating villages of Cambodia

Glenn Althor; Simon P. Mahood; Bradd Witt; Rebecca M. Colvin; James E. M. Watson

Collaboration


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Justine Lacey

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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G. Bradd Witt

University of Queensland

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Bradd Witt

University of Queensland

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Mark Howden

University of Melbourne

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Dona Whiley

University of Queensland

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Frank Mills

Australian National University

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Glenn Althor

University of Queensland

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Inez E Harker-Schuch

Australian National University

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