I/O and Conservation Psychology: A Natural Partnership for Sustainability Elise L. Amel & Britain A. Scott University of St. Thomas Christie M. Manning Macalester College
Mar 26, 2015
I/O and Conservation Psychology:
A Natural Partnership for Sustainability
Elise L. Amel & Britain A. ScottUniversity of St. Thomas
Christie M. ManningMacalester College
What is sustainability?
Living, working and developing in a way that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
To the degree that environmental problems are largely due to
human behavior and solutions will rely on changing these
behaviors, psychology is an essential player in the movement
toward environmental sustainability.
Unsustainable environmental impacts are often the unintended, compound result of decision makers and employees going about their work the way it has been traditionally structured.
Areas for Action
Priority:• Energy Use• Transportation• Food Choices
Also Important:• Water and Paper• Waste
I/O Psychologist have Mad Skills!
Our ResearchContext• Multi-year collaboration with the Minnesota
Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) to: – assess effectiveness of sustainability events– generate baseline data on attendees’ environmental
knowledge & behaviors– identify areas for which MPCA could develop
educational resources and exhibits
Venues• Living Green Expo attracts 20,000+ attendees
• Minnesota State Fair EcoExperience building attracts 350,000+ fairgoers (2nd most popular attraction at fair)
Methods
Participants• Participants represent a wide range of organization
types (e.g., health care, government, church, manufacturing, music, education) and sizes (10 to over 5,000)
Materials and Procedure• Surveys take 10 minutes, asked about attitudes,
knowledge and behavior regarding the environment.
• Participants were thanked and given sustainable goodies (e.g., low-flow shower and faucet heads, organic coffee or tea).
Demographics
e.g., Living Green Expo 2008, St. Paul, MN• N=115• Male=34%; Female=66%• Median age = 44• Caucasian=84%; Asian=8%• Protestant=28%; Catholic=15%; None=23%• Median household income=50-74k• College degree=44%; Advanced degree=26%• Parents=52%• Voted=84%• Dem=53%; undec=20%; indep=16%; Rep=6%
Demographics
e.g., State Fair 2007, St. Paul, MN• N=115• Male=37%; Female=63%• Median age = 41-50• Caucasian=92%; Asian=4%• Protestant=32%; Catholic=21%; None=16%• Median household income=50-74k• College degree=28%; Advanced degree=23%• Voted=85%• Dem=43%; undec=25%; Rep=17%
Initially, participants self-reported their own level of green behavior
Self-reported Green
LGE attendees rated themselves as significantly more green than SF attendees
e.g., t(183)=2.94, p<.01.
Global Satisfaction
• Overall satisfaction with one’s workplace? (7-point scale from extremely dissatisfied to extremely satisfied).
• Similar (slightly satisfied) between the two samples.
e.g., t(175)<1, p>.01.
Importance of Green
Living Green Expo attendees (M=moderately important, Mode=extremely important) believe it is significantly more important that their workplace be sustainable than the State Fair attendees (M and Mode=slightly important).
e.g., t(169)=3.9, p<.01)
Perceptions of Companies
• Could sustainability be compatible with organization’s mission?
mode=somewhat, on a scale ranging from not at all, to little, somewhat, or perfectly
• Workplace sustainability below light green
(anchored as sometimes choose the most sustainable option…) for both groups, as were perceptions of coworkers’ greenness.
More Sample Questions
To what degree has there been formal/informal discussion about increasing green behavior among employees in your workplace?
Daily Weekly Monthly Quarterly Yearly Once Never
I intend to talk with my coworkers about increasing green actions:
1 = strongly disagree 5 = strongly agree
Manifestations
• Formal discussion perceived as rare mode=never on 7-point scale never to daily
• Informal discussion surprisingly high (mode=weekly) on 7-point scale never to daily
• Almost 50% of the respondents indicated that their workplace does not support sustainable behavior through formal HR practices such as selection, training and performance appraisal.
Correlates of Satisfaction
overall workplace satisfaction is significantly correlated with…
…perceptions of how green an organization is(rs =.3, N=172, p<.01)
…coworker greenness, and frequency of formal/informal discussions
Predicting IntentionsPredictors of intention to talk to coworkers: • self-reported level of green (rs =.41, N=129, p<.01) • importance of one’s organization being green (rs =.39,
N=131, p<.01)• perceptions of how green organization is (rs =.33,
N=129, p<.01) • overall workplace satisfaction (rs=.23, N=127, p<.01)
*regressing all predictors on intention to talk leads to significant Betas for workplace greenness (.3) and overall satisfaction (.23), with R=.56 and R2=.32
Leave sustainable behavior at the (company) door?
• 50% responded that they conserve energy, minimize the impact of their food choices, and minimize the impact of their auto travel equally at work and at home.
• Slightly more (60% and 65%, respectively) recycle and conserve water equally at work and at home.
• Depending on the action, 25-50% of the respondents complete these behaviors more at home than at work, with 0-8% doing it more at work than at home.
Air Travel
• 40% of respondents said they do not avoid air travel when other transportation is available either at home or at work.
• Given the environmental effects of carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxide and high-elevation vapor created by air travel, this is a behavior pattern of great concern.
Summary• There are employees across diverse types and sizes of organizations
believe workplaces should be sustainable
• Sustainability perceived to fit with many organizations’ mission
• Organizations generally rated low on greenness
• Informal sustainability discussion occurs, formal discussion does not, both are limited
• Intention to approach coworkers about green behavior predicted by perceptions of organizational greenness and worker satisfaction
• Actual sustainable behavior at work is the same or less frequent than at home.
• Limited external validity of findings due to sample; possibly best-case scenario among Americans
In short, these data show a fair amount of informal green buzz at work but a significant absence of formal sustainability-related policy and behavior.
• In the media, Top-10 lists about what workers can do at work abound
• Few sources recognize that telling people what they can do does not translate automatically into a groundswell of behavior change
That’s where we come in!
Integrate Sustainability into HR Systems
• Selection Criteria
• Performance Appraisal
• Training
•Job Analysis & Competency Modeling•Selection•Performance Appraisal•Training•Alternative work schedules & arrangements
Conduct Research on Relevant Psychological Concepts as they
Relate to Sustainability• Norms• Modeling• Efficacy• Goal-setting• Feedback• Habits• Systems Thinking• Risk perceptions• Transformational Leadership• Etc…
Specific Change Ideas
Actions you can take in your office!
Energy Use
• Purchase alternative energy • Purchase energy efficient appliances • Replace incandescent lightbulbs with
CFLs and LEDs • Eliminate electric vampires (especially
plasma TVs) by using power strips and turning off rather than leaving on standby
• Set thermostat to 65 in winter and 74 in summer
Transportation
• Encourage worker and client commuting via carpooling, public transportation, bicycling and walking
• Reduce or eliminate unnecessary air travel
• Increase fuel efficiency of company fleet
• Encourage video conferencing
Food Choices
• Choose local, organic, and vegetarian
• Remember snacks, catering and restaurants
• Compost left-over food
Water and Paper• Provide filtered tap water
• Set defaults to print
double-sided
• Purchase high recycled-content supplies (e.g., paper, cartridges)
• Provide electronic instead of paper billing
• Reduce junk-mail and catalogs received
Garbage
• Plan zero-waste events by limiting packaging and disposables
• Company mug or water bottle that people can bring to meetings
• Recycle, donate and buy used equipment when possible
We have a lot to contribute…
Join in or with division 34 of APA
Acknowledgments
• Philipp Muessig and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
• Northern Environmental Support Trust