From theory to action: Explaining the process of knowledge attitudes and practices regarding the use and disposal of plastic among school children

Peer Reviewed
31 March 2022

César Salazar, Marcela Jaime, Mauricio Leiva, Nuria González

Environmental education is regarded as a key instrument for promoting pro-environmental behavior in early childhood. In this paper, we analyze the transmission process within a personal value system including knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) regarding the consumption and disposal of plastics among school children, and the extent to which parents play a role in mediating that transmission. The study gathers data from a sample of 1,521 children in southern Chile. Results evidence that the transmission of value systems is a recursive and hierarchical process, where knowledge mediates attitudes, and attitudes (and knowledge) mediate practices. We also find evidence that parents' behavior significantly explains children's behavior in all domains of KAP, with stronger connections among practices where children and parents interact more closely (e.g., packing a lunch box) and in those that are more visible to children (e.g. recycling).

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Salazar, C., Jaime, M., Leiva, M., & González, N. (2022). From theory to action: Explaining the process of knowledge attitudes and practices regarding the use and disposal of plastic among school children. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 80, 101777. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2022.101777
Publication | 28 March 2022