Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints

This dissertation examines three relationships between nature centers and their local communities. First, what are the values provided by local centers as perceived by community members? Second, what factors lead community members to support local centers? And third, what are the constraints to visi...

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Main Author: Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel
Other Authors: Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54581
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-545812020-09-29T05:30:37Z Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation Stern, Marc J. Charles, Cheryl Uysal, Muzaffer Hull, Robert Bruce IV Nature centers environmental education educational leisure settings environmental values nonprofit organizations philanthropy volunteering visitor constraints This dissertation examines three relationships between nature centers and their local communities. First, what are the values provided by local centers as perceived by community members? Second, what factors lead community members to support local centers? And third, what are the constraints to visiting local centers as perceived by community members? We surveyed random samples of community members living around 16 diverse nature centers across the United States and conducted quantitative and qualitative analyses to address these questions. Chapter one introduces the study and provides a literature review of theories and empirical research related to the research questions. Chapter two reports the results of an exploratory factor analysis on the level of importance communities assign to fourteen nature center services. The factor analysis revealed four underlying values: environmental connection, leisure provision, civic engagement, and community resilience. Chapter three tests sixteen hypothesized predictors of community support for nature centers. All these variables were significant, suggesting people volunteer at, donate to, or respond to threats at nature centers for a range of reasons. These include those related to supporting nature center missions (e.g. environmental connection significance and commitment to nature) but also other reasons such as friends' and family's perceptions of nature centers and assessments of the center staff members. Chapter four explores constraints that emerge during different stages of the decision-making process people go through when considering whether or not to visit a local nature center. The greatest constraints emerge in early stages (e.g. center awareness) and late stages (e.g. limited finances, transportation, and time) of decision-making. Chapter five discusses the study's implications to theory, including ecosystem service and educational leisure setting valuation, environmentally significant and charitable support behavior, and leisure constraints, as well as nature center practice. Centers that consider these implications might better serve their local communities and achieve their missions. Ph. D. 2015-07-22T08:01:11Z 2015-07-22T08:01:11Z 2015-07-21 Dissertation vt_gsexam:5936 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54581 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nature centers
environmental education
educational leisure settings
environmental values
nonprofit organizations
philanthropy
volunteering
visitor constraints
spellingShingle Nature centers
environmental education
educational leisure settings
environmental values
nonprofit organizations
philanthropy
volunteering
visitor constraints
Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel
Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
description This dissertation examines three relationships between nature centers and their local communities. First, what are the values provided by local centers as perceived by community members? Second, what factors lead community members to support local centers? And third, what are the constraints to visiting local centers as perceived by community members? We surveyed random samples of community members living around 16 diverse nature centers across the United States and conducted quantitative and qualitative analyses to address these questions. Chapter one introduces the study and provides a literature review of theories and empirical research related to the research questions. Chapter two reports the results of an exploratory factor analysis on the level of importance communities assign to fourteen nature center services. The factor analysis revealed four underlying values: environmental connection, leisure provision, civic engagement, and community resilience. Chapter three tests sixteen hypothesized predictors of community support for nature centers. All these variables were significant, suggesting people volunteer at, donate to, or respond to threats at nature centers for a range of reasons. These include those related to supporting nature center missions (e.g. environmental connection significance and commitment to nature) but also other reasons such as friends' and family's perceptions of nature centers and assessments of the center staff members. Chapter four explores constraints that emerge during different stages of the decision-making process people go through when considering whether or not to visit a local nature center. The greatest constraints emerge in early stages (e.g. center awareness) and late stages (e.g. limited finances, transportation, and time) of decision-making. Chapter five discusses the study's implications to theory, including ecosystem service and educational leisure setting valuation, environmentally significant and charitable support behavior, and leisure constraints, as well as nature center practice. Centers that consider these implications might better serve their local communities and achieve their missions. === Ph. D.
author2 Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
author_facet Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel
author Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel
author_sort Browning, Matthew Herbert Emerson Mutel
title Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
title_short Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
title_full Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
title_fullStr Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
title_full_unstemmed Nature Centers in Local Communities: Perceived Values, Support Factors, and Visitation Constraints
title_sort nature centers in local communities: perceived values, support factors, and visitation constraints
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54581
work_keys_str_mv AT browningmatthewherbertemersonmutel naturecentersinlocalcommunitiesperceivedvaluessupportfactorsandvisitationconstraints
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