Empowering Environmental Awareness Through Chemistry: A Science–Technology–Society–Environment-Based Approach to Teaching Acid–Base Reactions in 11th-Grade Science
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of the Intervention
- Critical reading of an adapted news article on acid rain, designed to introduce the theme, promote questioning and reflection, and situate acid–base reactions in social and environmental contexts.
- Laboratory activity on acid neutralization, simulating acid mine drainage (typically occurs when rainwater interacts with exposed rocks in mining areas, producing acidic water that can contaminate rivers and soils). Students, working in small groups, tested the neutralization of an artificially prepared acidic solution equivalent to water typically found in mining areas. Using different basic substances (both solid and aqueous), they monitored pH variations with a digital probe. This activity not only aimed to reinforce the chemical concept of neutralization, but also to reproduce on a small scale an environmental remediation process commonly applied to mitigate the harmful effects of acidified waters on ecosystems. At the same time, it fostered the development of experimental, analytical, and collaborative skills.
- Interdisciplinary role-play debate on ocean acidification, where students represented specialists from Chemistry, Biology, and Social/Economic domains. They researched, presented arguments, and defended mitigation proposals. Afterwards, mixed groups synthesized findings in a scientific poster, consolidating the concepts and transversal skills developed.
2.2. Data Collection and Analysis Instruments
- A set of 11 conceptual open-ended questions (Q1–Q10, Q13), structured according to Bloom’s taxonomy (Bloom & Krathwohl, 1969), ranging from basic comprehension to critical analysis and real-world application. These questions encouraged students not only to explain chemical processes (e.g., acid neutralization in the context of mine drainage) but also to reflect on the seriousness of environmental issues, the societal and economic impacts of acidification, and their own role as citizens in addressing these challenges.
- Two questions related to attitudes and values (Q11, Q12): three multiple-choice questions on fundamental acid–base concepts and related environmental phenomena (e.g., ocean acidification, acid rain) and a Likert-scale item measuring the degree of environmental concern, using a 5-point scale ranging from “not concerned at all” (1) to “very concerned” (5), aimed at capturing students’ affective engagement with sustainability issues. For instance, students were asked to rate their level of concern about problems such as acid rain or ocean acidification.
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative Analysis of Chemistry Conceptual Understanding and Environmental Awareness Pre- and Post-Test
3.2. Qualitative Results from Student Interviews
4. Discussion
4.1. Quantitative Analysis—Environmental Awareness Test (Pre- and Post-Test)
4.2. Qualitative Analysis of Students Interviews
5. Conclusions
6. Limitations and Future Directions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| STSE | Science-Technology-Society-Environment |
| g | Hake’s normalized gain |
| REACT | Relate, Experience, Apply, Cooperate, Transfer |
| 5Es | Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, Evaluate. |
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| Likert Scale | Action (Yes/No) with Justification | Overall Level of Environmental Concern |
|---|---|---|
| 1 to 2 | No/Weak justification | Very Low (VL) |
| 1 to 2 | Yes/Relevant justification | Low (L) |
| 3 | No/Weak justification | Low (L) |
| 3 | Yes/Relevant justification | Moderate (M) |
| 4 | No/Weak justification | Moderate (M) |
| 4 | Yes/Relevant justification | High (H) |
| 5 | No/Weak justification | High (H) |
| 5 | Yes/Relevant justification | Very High (VH) |
| Categories | Associated Questions | Description |
|---|---|---|
| A. Understanding of the scientific phenomenon | IQ1 and IQ2 | Ability of students to explain the studied phenomena (acid–base reactions, neutralization, and ocean acidification). |
| B. Environmental and citizenship awareness | IQ3 and IQ4 | Students’ perception of the severity of the environmental issues addressed and reflection on their role as citizens. References to possible behavioral changes. |
| C. Relation to the STSE approach: contextualized science and interdisciplinarity | IQ5, IQ6, IQ7 and IQ8 | Valuing science, particularly Chemistry, in understanding and solving real-world problems, recognizing the articulation between science, technology, society, and the environment, as well as the integration between knowledge areas and collaborative work. |
| D. Pedagogical experience and motivation | IQ9, IQ10 and IQ11 | Critical evaluation of the strategies used and of students’ engagement in the activities. Expressions of preference regarding the methodologies applied. |
| E. Personal and future impact | IQ12 and IQ13 | Perceived effects of the approach on the students’ school pathway and suggestions for improving similar experiences. |
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Gorito, G.; Morais, C. Empowering Environmental Awareness Through Chemistry: A Science–Technology–Society–Environment-Based Approach to Teaching Acid–Base Reactions in 11th-Grade Science. Educ. Sci. 2026, 16, 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16010038
Gorito G, Morais C. Empowering Environmental Awareness Through Chemistry: A Science–Technology–Society–Environment-Based Approach to Teaching Acid–Base Reactions in 11th-Grade Science. Education Sciences. 2026; 16(1):38. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16010038
Chicago/Turabian StyleGorito, Gonçalo, and Carla Morais. 2026. "Empowering Environmental Awareness Through Chemistry: A Science–Technology–Society–Environment-Based Approach to Teaching Acid–Base Reactions in 11th-Grade Science" Education Sciences 16, no. 1: 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16010038
APA StyleGorito, G., & Morais, C. (2026). Empowering Environmental Awareness Through Chemistry: A Science–Technology–Society–Environment-Based Approach to Teaching Acid–Base Reactions in 11th-Grade Science. Education Sciences, 16(1), 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16010038

