TY - JOUR
T1 - Greening the classroom
T2 - Three field experiments on the effects of indoor nature on students' attention, well-being, and perceived environmental quality
AU - van den Bogerd, Nicole
AU - Dijkstra, S. Coosje
AU - Tanja-Dijkstra, Karin
AU - de Boer, Michiel R.
AU - Seidell, Jacob C.
AU - Koole, Sander L.
AU - Maas, Jolanda
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Topsector Horticulture and Starting materials ( kv-1604-050 ), with co-funding of the Triodos Foundation and Royal Floraholland . The funding sources were not involved in the development, execution, or interpretation of the results of the three experiments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/3/15
Y1 - 2020/3/15
N2 - Prior work has shown beneficial effects of indoor nature (e.g. potted plants, green walls) on attention, health, and well-being for various groups, including students. The aim of this paper was to examine whether these effects also emerge when students attend a single lecture in a classroom with indoor nature. Three longitudinal field experiments, conducted at a university (N = 70), secondary school (N = 213), and a secondary vocational school (N = 161), examined students’ attention, well-being, health complaints, lecture evaluation, and perceived environmental quality with attentional tests and questionnaires. Perceived environmental quality of classrooms with (rather than without) indoor nature was consistently rated more favourably. Secondary education students also reported greater attention, lecture evaluation, and teacher evaluation after one lecture in classrooms with indoor nature compared to the classroom without. There were no straightforward intervention effects on well-being and health complaints. Although this research provides some support for indoor nature in classrooms, attending only one lecture in a classroom with indoor nature does not seem to provide immediate effects on health and well-being.
AB - Prior work has shown beneficial effects of indoor nature (e.g. potted plants, green walls) on attention, health, and well-being for various groups, including students. The aim of this paper was to examine whether these effects also emerge when students attend a single lecture in a classroom with indoor nature. Three longitudinal field experiments, conducted at a university (N = 70), secondary school (N = 213), and a secondary vocational school (N = 161), examined students’ attention, well-being, health complaints, lecture evaluation, and perceived environmental quality with attentional tests and questionnaires. Perceived environmental quality of classrooms with (rather than without) indoor nature was consistently rated more favourably. Secondary education students also reported greater attention, lecture evaluation, and teacher evaluation after one lecture in classrooms with indoor nature compared to the classroom without. There were no straightforward intervention effects on well-being and health complaints. Although this research provides some support for indoor nature in classrooms, attending only one lecture in a classroom with indoor nature does not seem to provide immediate effects on health and well-being.
KW - Classroom
KW - Green space
KW - Potted plants
KW - Restorative environments
KW - Wellbeing
U2 - 10.1016/j.buildenv.2020.106675
DO - 10.1016/j.buildenv.2020.106675
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85078185527
SN - 0360-1323
VL - 171
JO - Building and environment
JF - Building and environment
M1 - 106675
ER -