Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning

Purpose: Daily commuting trips of higher education (HE) students account for a large proportion of the carbon footprint of a HE institution. Considerations of students underlying their choice of travel mode and their decision to make the trip to campus or to study online are explored as a necessary first step for finding an optimal balance between online and on-campus learning from both a sustainability and an educational perspective. Design/methodology/approach: Focus group conversations were held with student groups from different study programmes of a university of applied sciences in the Netherlands. Findings: Dutch students’ travel mode choices seem to depend on measures regulating travel demand such as a free public transport card and high parking costs. The findings indicate that students make reasoned choices about making a trip to campus. These choices depend on considerations about their schedule, type, lecturer and content of a course, social norms and their own perceived behavioural control. Alternative online options can provide students with more flexibility to make choices adapted to their needs. Social implications: While these findings are useful for sustainable and educational reasons, they also seem helpful in times of COVID-19 which calls for a re-design of curricula to allow for blended forms of online and on-campus learning. Originality/value: To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this paper is one of the first studies looking at students’ considerations when deciding whether to travel to campus to learn or stay at home learning online.

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Main Authors: Versteijlen, Marieke, van Wee, Bert, Wals, Arjen
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Carbon footprint, Class attendance, Higher education, On-campus learning, Online learning, Student travel behaviour,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-sustainable-student-travel-behaviour-in-the-netherlands
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5865962025-01-14 Versteijlen, Marieke van Wee, Bert Wals, Arjen Article/Letter to editor International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education 22 (2021) 8 ISSN: 1467-6370 Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning 2021 Purpose: Daily commuting trips of higher education (HE) students account for a large proportion of the carbon footprint of a HE institution. Considerations of students underlying their choice of travel mode and their decision to make the trip to campus or to study online are explored as a necessary first step for finding an optimal balance between online and on-campus learning from both a sustainability and an educational perspective. Design/methodology/approach: Focus group conversations were held with student groups from different study programmes of a university of applied sciences in the Netherlands. Findings: Dutch students’ travel mode choices seem to depend on measures regulating travel demand such as a free public transport card and high parking costs. The findings indicate that students make reasoned choices about making a trip to campus. These choices depend on considerations about their schedule, type, lecturer and content of a course, social norms and their own perceived behavioural control. Alternative online options can provide students with more flexibility to make choices adapted to their needs. Social implications: While these findings are useful for sustainable and educational reasons, they also seem helpful in times of COVID-19 which calls for a re-design of curricula to allow for blended forms of online and on-campus learning. Originality/value: To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this paper is one of the first studies looking at students’ considerations when deciding whether to travel to campus to learn or stay at home learning online. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-sustainable-student-travel-behaviour-in-the-netherlands 10.1108/IJSHE-10-2020-0400 https://edepot.wur.nl/553299 Carbon footprint Class attendance Higher education On-campus learning Online learning Student travel behaviour https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Carbon footprint
Class attendance
Higher education
On-campus learning
Online learning
Student travel behaviour
Carbon footprint
Class attendance
Higher education
On-campus learning
Online learning
Student travel behaviour
spellingShingle Carbon footprint
Class attendance
Higher education
On-campus learning
Online learning
Student travel behaviour
Carbon footprint
Class attendance
Higher education
On-campus learning
Online learning
Student travel behaviour
Versteijlen, Marieke
van Wee, Bert
Wals, Arjen
Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
description Purpose: Daily commuting trips of higher education (HE) students account for a large proportion of the carbon footprint of a HE institution. Considerations of students underlying their choice of travel mode and their decision to make the trip to campus or to study online are explored as a necessary first step for finding an optimal balance between online and on-campus learning from both a sustainability and an educational perspective. Design/methodology/approach: Focus group conversations were held with student groups from different study programmes of a university of applied sciences in the Netherlands. Findings: Dutch students’ travel mode choices seem to depend on measures regulating travel demand such as a free public transport card and high parking costs. The findings indicate that students make reasoned choices about making a trip to campus. These choices depend on considerations about their schedule, type, lecturer and content of a course, social norms and their own perceived behavioural control. Alternative online options can provide students with more flexibility to make choices adapted to their needs. Social implications: While these findings are useful for sustainable and educational reasons, they also seem helpful in times of COVID-19 which calls for a re-design of curricula to allow for blended forms of online and on-campus learning. Originality/value: To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this paper is one of the first studies looking at students’ considerations when deciding whether to travel to campus to learn or stay at home learning online.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Carbon footprint
Class attendance
Higher education
On-campus learning
Online learning
Student travel behaviour
author Versteijlen, Marieke
van Wee, Bert
Wals, Arjen
author_facet Versteijlen, Marieke
van Wee, Bert
Wals, Arjen
author_sort Versteijlen, Marieke
title Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
title_short Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
title_full Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
title_fullStr Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
title_full_unstemmed Exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in The Netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
title_sort exploring sustainable student travel behaviour in the netherlands : balancing online and on-campus learning
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-sustainable-student-travel-behaviour-in-the-netherlands
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AT vanweebert exploringsustainablestudenttravelbehaviourinthenetherlandsbalancingonlineandoncampuslearning
AT walsarjen exploringsustainablestudenttravelbehaviourinthenetherlandsbalancingonlineandoncampuslearning
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