Cooperative Extension University of Wisconsin-Extension
National Extension Water Outreach Education
Skip Navigation 
WATER EDUCATION TOPICS
WATER MANAGEMENT TOPICS & ISSUES

Home » 
Changing Public Behavior  

Educator Self-Study Module
Step 4: Collect audience information relevant to the environmental practice and specific behaviors

I. Introduction

The “Conservation Planning Environment”

Water educators transfer information to relevant audiences, provide water management tools and techniques, and facilitate local environmental decision-making processes.

When educators focus on specific audiences their work is more likely to lead to desired results. Many factors can influence whether an individual will adopt an environmentally significant behavior. Educators can use research tools to identify and integrate information about particular areas and communities into an outreach strategy that encourages citizens to take appropriate actions in their homes, businesses, organizations, and communities.

As an example of how this understanding can be applied, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) suggests that the “conservation planning environment” consists of “the sum of all factors and issues that influence the content of a conservation plan” (USDA NRCS, 2001).

These factors and issues are divided into four, mutually significant categories:

  • natural resources
  • social and cultural issues
  • economic issues
  • legal and policy issues

Each of these factors plays mutually important roles in influencing how individuals make decisions and act in their everyday lives. As a result, conservation plans are more likely to be effective to the extent that they consider and integrate all four of the factors. The NRCS introduced the concept of the “conservation planning environment” to encourage natural resource professionals to move beyond focusing their conservation efforts “solely on natural resource problems and issues” towards a more holistic and in turn effective and sustainable approach equally integrative of all four factors and issues involved in the “conservation planning environment."

STEP 4. Collect audience information relevant to the environmental practice and specific behaviors

I. Introduction: Table of Contents

The “Conservation Planning Environment

Social and cultural issues are important

     Case Study I

Active participation of community members is vital to success

NR professionals can incorporate social dimensions in their work

What are social assessment tools ?

     Table 1:      Recommended      Tools and      Descriptions

     Triangulation in      Research

References



BACK TO STEP 4
TABLE OF CONTENTS


BACK TO MODULE INTRODUCTION