Abstract
This research seeks to measure the degree of consciousness for sustainable consumption in
a wide sample of university students. The interest of this study is to analyze if students’ choice of
degree, as well as their progress in university education, influences the development of the dimensions
that construct the consciousness for sustainable consumption. The study is completed by means of a
questionnaire survey aimed at first and final year students of seven university degrees across four
different faculties. Afactorial analysis of principal components is performed to analyze the dimensions
of sustainability and robust contrasts of mean differences are conducted to observe the differences
by degrees and years. The results indicate that the measurement scale of the variable consciousness
for sustainable consumption maintains its original structure when applied to a sample of Spanish
university students. Although there are significant differences by degree in the development of
awareness about sustainable consumption, the authors cannot conclude that the training received at
the degree level helps to improve the level of awareness of students in their decisions for responsible
behavior in consumption.