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Workshop structure. Why teach ?greening business' to any undergraduate?What should we teach in a greening business curriculum?Evaluation of experiences at KeeleExamples of available teaching materials and activitiesFeedback on resources. . Aims of a ?greening business' curriculum. Help students
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1. Giving graduates the skills to improve environmental performance in their future workplaces Dr Zoe Robinson
Senior Lecturer in Environmental Science
Keele University
2. Workshop structure Why teach ‘greening business’ to any undergraduate?
What should we teach in a greening business curriculum?
Evaluation of experiences at Keele
Examples of available teaching materials and activities
Feedback on resources
3. Aims of a ‘greening business’ curriculum Help students gain the knowledge, understanding and practical skills to help drive environmental and sustainability improvements in their future (or current) workplace
Help businesses adopt more sustainable practices
Make students more aware of employability-sustainability links
4. The broader context Increasing pressure from government and consumers for all business to address sustainability responsibilities
Environmental legislation
Reduce costs
Clients’ demands
Applicable to all industries and therefore all students
Growing job market
5. Greening Business at Keele Level 1 module, available to all L1 students
‘Greening Business: Employability and Sustainability’
Developed with environmental professionals – development and delivery
Module content
Why green? Motivations and barriers
Basic sustainability concepts
Basic environmental auditing training
6. Who chose it?
8. Benefits: Changes in individual behaviour 40% of students said that their own environmental behaviour had changed as a result of the module
Increased environmental awareness
11. Greening Business Resources Information slides
Classroom activities
Question bank (and answers)
Project ideas
12. Structure
14. Greening Business: An online teaching resource Session 5: Utilities management – energy and water
15. How to use the teaching slides These slides are not intended to form a complete lecture on the session topic.
These resources are designed to suggest a framework to help tutors develop their own lecture material
The resource slides comprise where appropriate; key points, case studies, images, references and further resources and suggested class activities.
There are limited case studies included. Students can develop their own portfolio of case studies as part of coursework activities
These resources may be used for educational purposes only, for other uses please contact the author at: z.p.robinson@keele.ac.uk
19. Have a look through the slide sets. What do you think of them?
20. Classroom activities In class discursive activities
In class quantitative activities
Homework research activities for later discussion
Practical activities and applications
21. Activity 1: Energy savings Your organisation has decreased its grid electricity use from 13,043,000 kWh in 2003 to 12,987,000 kWh in 2008.
At an average cost of £0.10 p/kWh what are the financial savings in 2008 compared to 2003?
1 kWh grid electricity = 0.537 kg CO2 What are the CO2 savings in 2008 compared to 2003?
22. Activity 1: Energy savings (Answers) Your organisation has decreased its grid electricity use from 13,043,000 kWh in 2003 to 12,987,000 kWh in 2008.
At an average cost of £0.10 p/kWh what are the financial savings in 2008 compared to 2003?
13,043,000 - 12,987,000 = 56,000 kWh saving
56,000 kWh x £0.10 = £5,600
2) 1 kWh grid electricity = 0.537 kg CO2 What are the CO2 savings in 2008 compared to 2003?
56,000 kWh x 0.537 kg = 30,072 kg (30 t) CO2
23. Activity 5: Rainwater harvesting case studies Look at a range of case studies at: http://www.rainharvesting.co.uk/pages/case_studs/cs_studs_lst1.html
Make a table summarising the use, annual rainfall, roof area, rainwater collection yield, capital cost
Calculate the annual savings (based on water rates of: £1.4 per m3)
How long will the financial payback time of the system be?
25. Activity 5: Rainwater harvesting (Answers)
26. Activity 2: Energy awareness campaign You are heading up a student-led energy awareness campaign at your institution
In groups, outline how you will encourage staff and students to reduce their energy through your campaign
27. Activity 3: Generating your own energy In groups, research a type of renewable energy source choosing from the following:
Solar (thermal and photovoltaic)
Wind
Hydro
Biomass
Geothermal
Outline the advantages and disadvantages of the renewable energy source
What is the potential for this energy source at the institution at which you are studying?
As a class, compare and contrast your findings of different renewable energy sources and their applications
28. Activity 4: Energy audit In groups, carry out an energy audit or baseline environmental review of the building in which you work/study
List five strategies that can be put in place to improve the energy criteria in the building
What are the approximate costs and payback periods of these measures?
29. Activity 6: Water audit In groups, carry out a water audit or baseline environmental review of the building in which you work/study
List five strategies that can be put in place to improve the water criteria in the building
What are the approximate costs and payback periods of these measures?
30. Other examples of activities in the online resource Calculation of CO2 equivalents
Research of case studies of good and bad practices
Research certification schemes
Evaluate LCA reports
31. Have a look through the example activities for the Energy and Water session. Comments?
32. Question banks Provided as Word file – ease of amendment
Answers provided in a password protected file
Structure out-of-class revision and additional research
Way of addressing other material that haven’t included explicitly in taught content
33. Example question bank Generic questions and case study based
Investigation of CSR reports
Students see real example of what companies are doing and how using it to their advantage
Skills – scanning for information
34. Have a look through the example question bank for the Motivations for ‘greening’ session. Comments?
35. Group project ideas Longer term projects
Centered around improvements on the University campus
Project briefs provided
Write report and present to class as a poster presentation
Report writing and visual/oral communication skills etc.
Group work template
36. Suggested topics:
Sustainable campus and corporate cars
Building environmental review and action plan
Office environmental review and action plan
Recycling audit
Cycle campaign
Green transport strategy
Water management plan
Electrical appliance plan
Green purchasing policies – cleaning products
Carbon footprints of field courses
37. Have a look through the example group project ideas. Comments?
38. Summary of benefits of a greening business module Benefits to students, staff, institutions, industry, wider society
Benefit to students from all disciplines
Enhances understanding of climate change/ sustainability to own lives
Provides sustainability education to the non-normally environmentally engaged
Increased environmental awareness leading to positive changes in individual behaviour
Enhanced employment prospects and awareness of sustainability-employment opportunities
Development of generic employability skills
Campus-curriculum links and opportunities to drive institutional change
39. What ‘sustainability skills’ Environmental and sustainability awareness
Sustainability concepts and tools
Auditing existing environmental practices
40. Acknowledgements Funding from the UK Higher Education Academy Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences (GEES) subject centre and Education for Sustainable Development project
The Keele University students who took part in this project