JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION

Scaling of attitudes toward population problems
Watkins GA
Initiating population education in Baltimore
Cochran CS and Mccrea LC
Population education in the United States
Roberts G
Population education in Florida secondary schools: a status study
Stahl RJ and Baker SD
Population education: what impacts can we measure?
Philliber SG
The impact of population education in Baltimore
Philliber SG, Cochran CS and Mccrea LC
Student Participation in Community-Based Participatory Research To Improve Migrant and Seasonal Farmworker Environmental Health: Issues for Success
Rao P, Arcury TA and Quandt SA
Involving students in community-based participatory research is a useful mechanism for engaging the community and helping it build future capacity. This article describes student involvement in a series of community-based environmental health research projects with migrant and seasonal farmworkers in North Carolina. High school, undergraduate, graduate, and professional school students have participated in various aspects of these projects, including planning, data collection, analysis, and reporting results. Students were required to invest time in learning about the farmworker population, as well as in learning to conduct community-based environmental health research. Drawing on these experiences, we offer observations regarding successful student integration in this type of research. Community-based projects benefit from student participation while encouraging the development of future community-oriented environmental health researchers.