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Educating children about dogs through projects in the classroom

Educating children about dogs through projects in the classroom
Educating children about dogs through projects in the classroom
Educational anthozoology is very common in Western schools, but scientific evidence to support its efficacy is scarce. The aim of the current research was to assess the effectiveness of two presentation styles using a project developed for children in the fourth grade in Pisa (Italy).

Participants (n=114; 6 classes) were divided into 3 groups. Group A (n= 45) attended 2 lectures, on canine communication and puppy development, and undertook observational activities with a dog in the classroom. Group B (n=33) received the same lectures but without the dog. Group A and B together formed the experimental group. Finally group C (n=46) was the control group and did not attend the project. All groups completed two questionnaires each comprising 10 closed items addressing topics covered in the lectures. The control group completed the questionnaire once. The experimental group (A and B) completed the questionnaires immediately after the lectures and again 10 weeks later. Correct answers were analyzed using the X2 test (p<0.05).

There was no significant difference between groups A and B in performance at either presentation of the questionnaires, thus they could be combined. Group A answered two more questions correctly than group B, which was significant.

When comparing the experimental (A plus B) and control group, significant differences were found. The children who attended the project gave significantly more correct answers both immediately after the project (11 more correct answers in A+B vs C) and 10 weeks later (8 more correct answers in A+B vs C).

Results seem to validate the effectiveness of projects of educational anthrozoology in increasing children’s knowledge about dogs, independently from whether or not a dog is present. This may widen the acceptability of such education in schools where dogs per se may not be welcome, thereby assisting accident prevention with dogs in the community.
Gazzano, A.
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Papi, F.
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McBride, E.A.
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Zilocchi, M.
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Menjoli, M.
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Sighieri, C.
ea6dd110-b2ed-4ec0-9d83-0d275a60f385
Mariti, C.
9e7dadfc-277b-426c-b4bd-0c99a4d0d08e
Gazzano, A.
516c5070-9121-41f7-b06c-f7a0ce2a7f03
Papi, F.
cbbc57bd-8b51-4e81-9885-50b92e32755f
McBride, E.A.
8f13b829-a141-4b67-b2d7-08f839972646
Zilocchi, M.
cac699a0-26a9-43f6-9a47-c6811535257a
Menjoli, M.
595f2e37-0c4a-473b-8ec0-72defa4303ab
Sighieri, C.
ea6dd110-b2ed-4ec0-9d83-0d275a60f385
Mariti, C.
9e7dadfc-277b-426c-b4bd-0c99a4d0d08e

Gazzano, A., Papi, F., McBride, E.A., Zilocchi, M., Menjoli, M., Sighieri, C. and Mariti, C. (2010) Educating children about dogs through projects in the classroom. 19th Annual Conference of the International Society for Anthrozoology, Stockholm, Sweden. 30 Jun 2010.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

Educational anthozoology is very common in Western schools, but scientific evidence to support its efficacy is scarce. The aim of the current research was to assess the effectiveness of two presentation styles using a project developed for children in the fourth grade in Pisa (Italy).

Participants (n=114; 6 classes) were divided into 3 groups. Group A (n= 45) attended 2 lectures, on canine communication and puppy development, and undertook observational activities with a dog in the classroom. Group B (n=33) received the same lectures but without the dog. Group A and B together formed the experimental group. Finally group C (n=46) was the control group and did not attend the project. All groups completed two questionnaires each comprising 10 closed items addressing topics covered in the lectures. The control group completed the questionnaire once. The experimental group (A and B) completed the questionnaires immediately after the lectures and again 10 weeks later. Correct answers were analyzed using the X2 test (p<0.05).

There was no significant difference between groups A and B in performance at either presentation of the questionnaires, thus they could be combined. Group A answered two more questions correctly than group B, which was significant.

When comparing the experimental (A plus B) and control group, significant differences were found. The children who attended the project gave significantly more correct answers both immediately after the project (11 more correct answers in A+B vs C) and 10 weeks later (8 more correct answers in A+B vs C).

Results seem to validate the effectiveness of projects of educational anthrozoology in increasing children’s knowledge about dogs, independently from whether or not a dog is present. This may widen the acceptability of such education in schools where dogs per se may not be welcome, thereby assisting accident prevention with dogs in the community.

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More information

Published date: June 2010
Venue - Dates: 19th Annual Conference of the International Society for Anthrozoology, Stockholm, Sweden, 2010-06-30 - 2010-06-30

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 146125
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/146125
PURE UUID: 96197d3d-7f5f-4315-8a97-1eed186169cc

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2010 15:26
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 00:54

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Contributors

Author: A. Gazzano
Author: F. Papi
Author: E.A. McBride
Author: M. Zilocchi
Author: M. Menjoli
Author: C. Sighieri
Author: C. Mariti

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