BEPs Research Navigation
Audience Description:
The Higher Education Student audience: are students engaged in post-secondary, formal education
Study-Specific BEPs
These study-specific Best Education Practices distill findings derived from the studies listed in the References below, which were identified using a meta-analysis technique.
Outreach Themes: BEPs are described by one or more of seven focus areas.
Outreach Themes |
Research Recommendations |
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The Audience |
No research available |
Message content |
No research available |
Message delivery vehicle |
No research available |
Outreach strategy |
Use simulation games to help increase participant flexibility in making choices. Design training to provide students with work in teams on a practical experience with interdisciplinary participants. |
Public participation |
No research available |
Supporting and motivating professionals |
No research available |
Evaluation |
No research available |
Linking Study-Specific BEPs to Essential BEPs
Essential BEPs provide an overview of Best Education Practices derived from education theory and other meta-analysis studies. This table shows which Essential BEPs are highlighted by research about students in higher education as a target audience. The entire collection of Essential BEPs is available on the Water Outreach website.
Education for: |
The learning experience: |
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The Individual |
Promotes active engagement and real world problem solving. Enables the learner to link new knowledge to their existing knowledge in meaningful ways. Builds thinking and reasoning skills that learners can use to construct and apply their knowledge. Allows a learner to interact and collaborate with others on instructional tasks. |
The Class or Group |
No relevant research findings |
Web-Based Learning |
No relevant research findings |
The Community |
No relevant research findings |
Beyond the Community |
No relevant research findings |
Supporting References
Dresner, M. (1989/90). Changing energy end-use patterns as a means of reducing global-warming trends. The Journal of Environmental Education, 21(2), 41-46.
Ryder, B. A., & Swoope, K. S. F. (1997). Learning about riparian rehabilitation: Assessing natural resource and landscape architecture student teams. Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 26(2), 115-119.