Natural disasters increasingly disrupt real estate markets, yet traditional appraisal education focuses primarily on stable market conditions, leaving students underprepared for valuation challenges in disrupted contexts. The paper addresses this gap by proposing a structured instructional framework to prepare appraisal students for post-disaster valuation assignments. The framework identifies six core dimensions through which disaster impacts appraisal practice: (1) value, (2) risk perception, (3) spillover effects, (4) FEMA’s 50% Rule, (5) Risk Rating 2.0, and (6) distorted comparables. Drawing on pedagogical theory, regulatory standards, hazard data, and prior research, each dimension is paired with applied tools, including decision frameworks, case scenarios, and in-class activities that emphasize applied judgment and USPAP-compliant reasoning. To assess initial effectiveness, the framework was evaluated using practitioner survey data and pre-/post-session student self-evaluations. Findings provide exploratory support for the framework’s relevance to practice and its potential to improve students’ applied appraisal understanding. While grounded in the U.S. regulatory environment, the modular framework can be adapted to international contexts through substitution of local standards and insurance regimes. This study offers a replicable pedagogical structure for integrating climate risk and post-disaster valuation challenges into real estate education.
Hana Nguyen (Tue,) studied this question.