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Teaching Sustainable Soil Management: A Framework for Using Problem‐Based Learning
Author(s) -
Krzic Maja,
Bomke Arthur A.,
Sylvestre Melanie,
Brown Sandra J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
natural sciences education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2168-8281
DOI - 10.4195/nse2014.07.0015
Subject(s) - curriculum , work (physics) , natural resource management , natural resource , soil quality , agriculture , sustainable agriculture , relevance (law) , sustainable development , business , environmental resource management , mathematics education , engineering , sociology , pedagogy , environmental science , psychology , geography , political science , mechanical engineering , archaeology , law
Postsecondary institutions are currently developing and applying innovative curricula to meet the future demand for land managers and planners with a solid knowledge of soil science. The objective of this study was to describe and evaluate the University of British Columbia (UBC) Farm problem‐based learning (PBL) case study within the upper level, undergraduate/graduate Sustainable Soil Management course. The UBC Farm case led to compilation of a student‐generated data set that dates back to 2004 and allowed students to work in collaboration with the UBC Farm managers and staff. Preliminary student feedback indicated that the UBC Farm case was effective at presenting the impacts of agricultural management practices on soil chemical properties and overall soil quality concepts. In addition, students found the hands‐on activities of soil sampling, data interpretation, and working in collaboration with the farm staff to be stimulating. Having the opportunity to involve students in data collection each year allows instructors to build depth into the case, to ask more complex questions, and to cooperate with the farm manager in focusing on specific issues of relevance to the farm that change over time. This educational approach could serve as a framework for using PBL within postsecondary soil science curriculum in ways that support both student learning and natural resource management.