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A pilot study on the influence of educational interventions on domestic electricity consumers

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dc.contributor.advisor Kriek, Jeanne
dc.contributor.advisor Stols, G.
dc.contributor.author Bukula, Thembani
dc.date.accessioned 2014-08-19T05:32:36Z
dc.date.available 2014-08-19T05:32:36Z
dc.date.issued 2012-11
dc.identifier.citation Bukula, Thembani (2012) A pilot study on the influence of educational interventions on domestic electricity consumers, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13825> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13825
dc.description.abstract This pilot study consists of two parts. The first part investigates the extent to which the domestic electricity consumers intend to use and use energy efficiently using the Theory of Planned Behaviour. The second part investigates the extent to which the Energy @ Home educational intervention changed the domestic electricity consumers’ behaviour. For the first part of the study an advertisement was published and a convenience stratified sample of 61 domestic electricity consumers were selected from the 290 respondents. Data was collected from the domestic electricity consumers via a questionnaire and a telephone response log. The co-relational research design was used to investigate the relationship between the predictor variables the independent variables in the constructs of the Theory of Planned Behaviour. Simple linear regression analysis resulted in F statistic for the predicted behavioural intention was 29.74 with a p value less than 0.0001 which indicates significant statistical evidence of a linear relation between the predictor variables and the independent variables. The r2 of 0.87 implies that data points that fall closely along the best fit line. Therefore the predictor variables were good predictors of the response variable. All the participants that intended to use electricity efficiently confirmed via the telephone that they were using electricity efficiently. In the second part of the study 11 out of the 61 participants were chosen to participate in the Energy @ Home educational intervention and television program. Data was collected via the Energy audit log and the electricity consumption log. The participants intended to save between 2% and 35% of their electricity consumption and the actual electricity consumption savings were between 2% and 30%. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (143 leaves) : color illustrations en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Energy efficiency en
dc.subject Domestic electricity consumers en
dc.subject Energy @ Home educational intervention en
dc.subject Behaviour en
dc.subject Behavioural intentions en
dc.subject Electricity consumption en
dc.subject Theory of Planned behaviour en
dc.subject Energy audit en
dc.subject Technological advances en
dc.subject Convenience stratified random sample en
dc.subject.ddc 333.793213071068
dc.subject.lcsh Electric power consumption -- South Africa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Electric power consumption -- Study and teaching -- South Africa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Educational television programs -- South Africa -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Consumers -- South Africa -- Attitudes -- Case studies en
dc.title A pilot study on the influence of educational interventions on domestic electricity consumers en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Science and Technology Education en
dc.description.degree M. Sc. (Mathematics, Physics & Technology Education (Physics Education))


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