The Learning Tree.Green Education Is Transforming America's Basic Environmental Illeteracy. So Why Isn't Everyone Smiling? Tow-headed Thomas Wolff Thomas Wolff (July 14 1954, New York City – July 31 2000, Kern County), a noted mathematician, working primarily in the fields of harmonic analysis, complex analysis, and partial differential equations. , a first-grader on a field trip from Stratfield School in Fairfield, Connecticut Fairfield is a town located in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. It is situated along the Gold Coast of Connecticut. Fairfield is a town of many neighborhoods, two of which -- Southport and Greenfield Hill -- are notably affluent. , was the first to spot the Canadian goose family, which was busy improving the view at the Connecticut Audubon Society's six-acre Birdcraft Sanctuary Birdcraft Sanctuary is a site significant for its ... It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1993.[1],[2],[3] References 1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. . The sanctuary and museum, established in 1914, was once twice as big, but it was cut in half 40 years ago by the pounding interstate highway that now provides constant background noise. In an irony that dramatizes how developers often appropriate the very name of the natural oasis they destroy, Audubon Condominiums is now right across the street. The kids had a grand time turning over rocks and getting grossed out by the termite termite or white ant, common name for a soft-bodied social insect of the order Isoptera. Termites are easily distinguished from ants by comparison of the base of the abdomen, which is broadly joined to the thorax in termites; in ants, there is colonies they uncovered. Parent volunteer Ivan Maisel told his young charges to "listen up, guys," while he asked them to define "a safe place for nature." Again, Thomas Wolff was ready. "You need oxygen," he said, "and trees for birds to build their nests, and a good supply of food." All that was obviously available in the Sanctuary, but just as obvious were the encroaching parking lots that seemed to be at the end of every short trail. As rain threatened, the kids herded inside the adjoining museum, where heads of deer and a seemingly anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism n. 1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order. 2. rhino looked down on them. After counting the colors on a display of stuffed birds, the Birds, The Hitchcock film in which birds turn on the human race and terrorize a town. [Am. Cinema: Halliwell, 51] See : Birds first graders sat down with volunteer Colleen Connor, who had a lesson about the web of life. She threaded an elaborate star pattern in yarn on the kids' fingers, then pulled a single strand and the whole thing unraveled. "See?" she said, "they were all linked together. If one piece of the web breaks down, they all go. And that's why it's important to have nature sanctuaries." There has been an explosion of interest in environmental education in the U.S., and 31 states now require that it be part of system-wide curriculums. By 1990, for instance, more Pennsylvania high school students were taking environmental science than were taking physics. Lessons once restricted to Earth Day are now learned everyday. On the university level, there is similar growth. As The Class of 2000 Report prepared by the Nathan Cummings Foundation The Nathan Cummings Foundation was endowed by Nathan Cummings (1896-1985), founder of Consolidated Foods, now called Sara Lee Corporation. Cummings was also a prominent art collector and supporter of Jewish causes. notes, a third of all existing environmental studies and science programs on the university level were formed between 1990 and 1994, following the very successful 20th anniversary of Earth Day. (And college students practice what they preach: 2,700 universities have recycling programs, compared to just 50 in 1980.) Nonprofit groups have also invested heavily in environmental education: The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS See Windows CardSpace. ), which runs the Bronx Zoo Bronx Zoo formally New York Zoological Park Zoo in New York City. It opened in 1899 on 265 acres (107 hectares) in the northwestern area of the Bronx. In 1941 it added the 4-acre (1. and other New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. institutions, has an ambitious environmental education program underway in Chinese grade schools, with the aim of building an understanding of and appreciation for the natural world. "We're making real inroads inroads Noun, pl make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings inroads npl to make inroads into [+ ," says Annette Berkovits, WCS vice president of education. Gaylord Nelson Gaylord Anton Nelson (June 4, 1916 – July 3, 2005) was a Democrat American politician from Wisconsin. He was the principal founder of Earth Day. In 1970, he called for Congressional hearings on the safety of combined oral contraceptive pills, which were famously called "The , the former U.S. Senator from Wisconsin who founded Earth Day, was instrumental in making his state's K-12 environmental education program a model for the rest of the nation. "Since 1985," he says, "would-be Wisconsin teachers in any subject have had to be qualified in environmental education to get their certificates. The law doesn't mandate specific programs, but it requires that teachers infuse in·fuse v. 1. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles. 2. To introduce a solution into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes. the environmental element into whatever they're teaching." Despite some progressive state laws, environmental education in the nation's classrooms is still a mixed bag. Most students take actual environmental science classes, while others find the subject doled out Adj. 1. doled out - given out in portions apportioned, dealt out, meted out, parceled out distributed - spread out or scattered about or divided up in various forms during science or social studies units. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Richard Wilke, a leading environmental educator at the University of Wisconsin in Stevens Point Stevens Point, city (1990 pop. 23,006), seat of Portage co., central Wis., on the Wisconsin and Plover rivers; inc. 1858. The major industries are insurance and the manufacture of wood products, cheese, furniture, and fishing equipment. The Univ. , some form of green curricula is now reaching a majority of America's K-12 kids. "In some school districts, there are planned comprehensive environmental education programs, and students are getting a very good education," he said. "In other school districts, the education is more hit or miss. One teacher may talk about certain issues, but students are not getting information in a systematic way. What we want is for students to move from an appreciation of nature to thinking critically about the issues and working to effect their outcomes." The good news is that the environmental message seems to be getting through. "I speak all over the country at grade schools, high schools and colleges," says Nelson, "and it finally dawned on me that seventh and eighth graders ask far more perceptive and penetrating questions about the environment than college seniors did when Earth Day was founded. A lot of education is going on." In a recent React magazine poll, in which 64 percent of students said that they recycle, students' comments were typified by 17-year-old Ferris, who said, "I just started recycling because I realized what was happening to the world with pollution. I know I'm only one person, but if everyone does it, we can change the world before it becomes an even bigger disaster." Closing the Knowledge Gap Educators say the push for green education can't be delayed. According to the annual "National Report Card on Environmental Knowledge, Attitudes and Behaviors" released in November 1997, the American public receives a failing grade in basic environmental knowledge. Of the 1,500 adults surveyed by Roper Starch Worldwide, only 23 percent could identify the leading cause of water pollution in the U.S. (non-point source runoff), and most others cited factories as the central problem. Nearly half believe, incorrectly, that dams produce most of our country's electricity. Only one out of 10 students made the "Environmental Dean's List dean's list n. pl. deans' lists A list of students in a high school, college, or university who have attained high academic rank. " with 11 or more correct answers to 12 simple questions about the world around them. On the positive side, most Americans (69 percent) know that vehicle exhaust is the leading cause of air pollution and that species loss is due to habitat destruction Habitat destruction is a process of land use change in which one habitat-type is removed and replaced with another habitat-type. In the process of land-use change, plants and animals which previously used the site are displaced or destroyed, reducing biodiversity. (73 percent). Michelle Harvey Doctor Michelle Louise Harvey (born 21 February 1978 in Brisbane) is an Australian forensic scientist specialising in forensic entomology (use of insects in the investigation of crimes). , vice president for programs of the Washington-based National Environmental Educational and Training Foundation, which commissioned the survey, admits that Americans don't have a good grasp of the issues. But, she says, "the knowledge base increases with education. People in the 35- to 55-year-old range answer the survey questions most accurately, and that's because of the environmental education programs that have been started since 1970. An encouraging sign is that our survey shows older people hold on to environmental information for a long time once they learn it." Gaylord Nelson authored the original Environmental Education Act, which was passed in 1970 to encourage nationwide programs and disburse dis·burse tr.v. dis·bursed, dis·burs·ing, dis·burs·es To pay out, as from a fund; expend. See Synonyms at spend. [Obsolete French desbourser, from Old French desborser educational grants. But it achieved little in its original incarnation as an adjunct of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. In 1990, after being gutted during the Reagan administration Noun 1. Reagan administration - the executive under President Reagan executive - persons who administer the law , the Act was reintroduced in strengthened form by Senator Kent Burdick of North Dakota North Dakota, state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Minnesota, across the Red River of the North (E), South Dakota (S), Montana (W), and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba (N). , with responsibility for implementation shifting to the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and . Its renewed success has angered conservative lawmakers, and an unsuccessful bill introduced in the 104th Congress attempted to defund de·fund tr.v. de·fund·ed, de·fund·ing, de·funds To stop the flow of funds to: "Some days, they wake up with a burning desire to defund the Public Broadcasting System and the National Endowment for the the program (which provides $40 million over five years). The defunding bill was reintroduced in the 105th Congress. "Scared ... Green?" In Minneapolis, a class of fifth graders wades through a salt water marsh, and kids talk with their teacher about the plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records. around them. Later, after they've gone back to the classroom, they have a lively discussion about our steadily disappearing wetlands. In Denver, seventh graders go them one better. With the help of a borrowed backhoe, they turn a weed-choked one-acre parking lot into a fully functioning wetland, planting 10,000 bullrushes in the process As the Rocky Mountain News The Rocky Mountain News is a daily morning tabloid-format newspaper published in Denver, Colorado. It is owned by the E. W. Scripps Company. (Despite Scripps still running the paper, it's the only newspaper in the Scripps family not to have the corporate lighthouse logo on notes about Colorado's statewide plan, "Virtually every school district has built environmental topics into the curriculum at every grade level, with units on energy consumption, endangered species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S. , population growth and threats to air and water from pollution." Mary Gromko, the Colorado Education Department's science consultant, adds, "It's not what it used to be--let's take a walk in the woods and talk about why we have acid rain." More than 90 percent of middle and high schools in the U.S. have ecology dubs or strong green curriculums, and Boston-based Ecology Communications is attempting to organize them online through its www.ecology.com website. "I think--for obvious reasons--that this is the right time, to do everything possible with high school kids," says Jack Hoagland, Ecology Communications chairman. Using e-mail, the students are finding they have shared interests. A club member in Baltimore wrote about dangerous bacteria outbreaks in the Chesapeake Bay Chesapeake Bay, inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, c.200 mi (320 km) long, from 3 to 30 mi (4.8–48 km) wide, and 3,237 sq mi (8,384 sq km), separating the Delmarva Peninsula from mainland Maryland. and Virginia. , and another in Arkansas talked about cropdusting and clearcutting. It's hard to see anything sinister in kids learning first-hand about their environment, but to an increasingly vocal group of right-wing think tanks and corporate spokesmen, "green" education is a danger that threatens the very foundations of American democracy. That movement is being spearheaded by Michael Sanera, a former Arizona political science professor who is the co-author, with Jane Shaw The Revd Canon Dr Jane Alison Shaw (born 1965) is a British priest and scholar. Shaw read Modern History at Regent's Park College, Oxford, (BA 1985, MA 1991), Theology at Harvard University (MDiv 1988), and completed a PhD in History at the University of California, Berkeley , of a fiercely opinionated o·pin·ion·at·ed adj. Holding stubbornly and often unreasonably to one's own opinions. [Probably from obsolete opinionate : opinion + -ate1. book with the deceptively neutral title Facts Not Fear: A Parent's Guide to Teaching Children About the Environment. Educators like Wilke, who disagree strongly with Sanera's contention that kids are being given a one-sided education with a liberal bias, nevertheless admit that he has been effective in getting that message into the public debate. Sometimes it seems that the environmental education agenda has been reduced to responding to Sanera's broadsides. In interviews, Sanera, the former director of the Center for Environmental Education Research at the conservative Claremont Institute The Claremont Institute is a conservative think tank based in Claremont, California. The mission of the Claremont Institute is "to restore the principles of the American Founding to their rightful, preeminent authority in our national life. think tank (he's now at the similarly conservative Center for the New West), comes across as reasonable and concerned, an educator whose primary focus is ensuring that kids get a balanced education. "The environmental information in most popular textbooks is one-sided" Sanera says. "And the nature of that bias is to always present the most catastrophic version of a scientific problem. The peer-reviewed offsetting information doesn't make it into the textbooks." Sanera cites as "one of the most flagrant examples" a textbook called Concepts and Challenges in Earth Science, which states, in accordance with a common hypothesis, that global warming global warming, the gradual increase of the temperature of the earth's lower atmosphere as a result of the increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. could cause the polar ice caps to melt and flood coastal cities. In what is obviously a typographical error, the book predicts that if the icecaps melted, "the sea level would rise 61 km." (The authors probably meant centimeters, not kilometers.) "It's exaggerated 61,000 times" Sanera exclaims. In his pamphlet Textbook Trash, Sanera argues that, contrary to what is being told to American youth, the forests are not declining, air pollution is under control, acid rain may not be a problem, biodiversity is protected, population growth is reversing itself and there's an abundant food supply. In fact, however, the sources for the information presented as objective in Sanera's writings are themselves ideologically committed. Sanera quotes such well-known environmental "optimists" as the late Professor Julian Simon and the Hoover Institute's Thomas Gale Moore. An "expert" on global warming cited by Sanera, Robert Bailing of Arizona State University Arizona State University, at Tempe; coeducational; opened 1886 as a normal school, became 1925 Tempe State Teachers College, renamed 1945 Arizona State College at Tempe. Its present name was adopted in 1958. , has been funded by coal and mining interests, and by the government of Kuwait. The Claremont Institute, under whose auspices Sanera and Shaw wrote Facts Not Fear, is funded by the Sarah Scaife Foundation The Sarah Scaife Foundation is one of the American Scaife Foundations. It is controlled by Richard Mellon Scaife. The foundation does not award grants to individuals. It concentrates its efforts towards causes focused on public policy at a national and international level. , a prominent conservative underwriter. Sanera, who is also associated with the Heritage Foundation and the Competitive Enterprise Institute, served in the Reagan administration and is the author of another book called Mandate for Leadership: Continuing the Conservative Revolution. "Sanera is too smart to say there shouldn't be any environmental education," says Augusto Medina, project manager of the Environmental Education and Training Partnership. "Instead, he says that it needs to be based on objective science, and that we're scaring the kids out of their socks." Richard Wilke adds, "Sanera has an agenda beyond simply providing objective information. But he has been very influential. He's very well wired to sources of funding and to the important journals of opinion." Wilke, who has frequently debated Sanera, admits to feeling "frustrated" at being put on the defensive by the unrelenting attacks, instead of focusing on the very positive story that can be told about environmental education today. Unfortunately, he notes, the media see more news value in a negative story. His opinion is borne out by a survey of environmental education coverage conducted for the Center for Commercial-Free Public Education, which found that critics "sought to demonize de·mon·ize tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es 1. To turn into or as if into a demon. 2. To possess by or as if by a demon. 3. environmental education," with Michael Sanera the most often-quoted critic. A negative account carried by the Investor's Business Daily Investor's Business Daily (IBD) is a national newspaper in the United States, published Monday through Friday, that covers international business, finance, and the global economy. Founded in 1984 by William O'Neil, its headquarters are in Los Angeles, California. , for instance, accused the textbooks of parroting biased opinion from the pages of Garbage magazine, which has been defunct for six years and was hardly radical in any case. "I think environmental education will continue to grow," Wilke says. "If you look at that recent Roper poll, 96 percent of parents want environmental education. People realize that our economy is based on environmental resources, and our health as a nation is based on the quality of our environment." Setbacks and Advances Sanera and others were active in a successful 1996 effort to repeal the environmental education mandate in Arizona. According to U.S. News and Worm Report, "The curriculum guide has been withdrawn and funding for classroom projects slashed." Arizona State Representative Russell Bowers of Mesa, who led the fight, says he was prompted by reports that second graders were dancing to wolf howls and whale songs. "It's ecocultism," he says. Other efforts are underway in Texas, where fundamentalists have targeted the state school board and interest groups have raised objections to an environmental science textbook as "too negative on an industrial society." In 1997, Texas officials became so convinced that students were receiving an "unbalanced" picture on environmental issues that they sponsored a seminar in which leading oil and chemical corporations were invited to participate. One Exxon brochure handed out during the event touted the advantages of internal-combustion engines over electric vehicles. Environmental groups were. not invited to the event. In Florida, a school superintendent candidate cited a textbook as presenting "a Unabomber theme." Groups have tried to ban Dr. Seuss' The Lorax in one California timber community, and a Parental Rights Amendment was proposed in New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E). . (Pushed by the American Legislative Exchange Council The American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, is a nonpartisan, ideologically conservative [1], non-profit 501(c)(3) membership association of state legislators and private sector policy advocates. , the amendment would have required children to get parental permission to learn anything about "nuclear war, nuclear policy ... globalism glob·al·ism n. A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence. glob ... population control, and organic evolution, including Darwin's theory ...") Many of the forays against giving children a green education are arising from a coalition with an eco-friendly name. The Environmental Education Working Group (EEWG EEWG Environmental Economics Working Group ) has as its stated purpose the creation of "a firm intellectual base of sound science and economics" for environmental education. In reality, however, EEWG is aligned with a range of conservative organizations, including Focus on the Family and the Political Economy Research Center (PERC PERC See: Preferred equity redemption stock ), which employs Jane Shaw, co-author of Facts Not Fear. The Heartland Institute, another EEWG associate, has distributed a "guide" to Earth Day that claims that environmentalists are "anti-human, anti-science, anti-trade and anti-free enterprise." Environmental education wouldn't be under such unrelenting attack if it were not effective. Richard Wilke says that a University of Wisconsin poll of prospective teachers 10 years ago found less than 20 percent saying they would willingly sign up for environmental education classes. When polled after taking mandatory classes, however, a full 90 percent said the courses were as valuable or more valuable than any other class they took. And teachers who have taken environmental training are far more effective at passing their information on to students, studies show. "We are making a lot of progress on environmental literacy among American students," Wilke says, "though their level of knowledge is far from where it needs to be." Greenwashing 101 The backlash against environmental education is ironic, because corporations, particularly through television commercials, continue to have far more of a role in shaping young people's thoughts and attitudes than do green science curricula. According to Redefining the American Dream, two-thirds of today's 10- to 16-year-olds say television shapes the values of their contemporaries. By the time they reach 18, American kids have watched more than 23,000 hours of TV--far more time than they spend in classrooms. In the course of a single day, a child sees 100 commercials. It's hardly surprising, then, that per capita [Latin, By the heads or polls.] A term used in the Descent and Distribution of the estate of one who dies without a will. It means to share and share alike according to the number of individuals. consumption of soft drinks has doubled since the 1970s. Corporate-sponsored messages reach kids through television commercials, viewed at home and in classroom programs like Channel One and the Physical Education TV program (sponsored by Reebok Ree´bok` n. 1. (Zool.) The peele. ). Corporate videos,software,posters,activity sheets and lesson plans are also distributed to schools nationwide. It's a surefire way to reach kids, whose products amount to $100 billion in sales annually. For example, an "activity book" distributed by the American Coal Foundation teaches that increased carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. brought on by global warming "makes plants grow larger." DuPont, which discharged over 348 million pounds of chemical pollutants in 1989, tells kids in a poster distributed to schools that it's their job to reduce waste--by, for example, making birdfeeders out of old plastic soda containers. A "teaching kit" produced by International Paper, a major logger, informs students that cutting mature trees promotes "the growth of trees that require full sunlight." Exxon's Aquarium Without Walls, presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. a paean Paean (pē`ən), Paean was an epithet for Apollo, the healer. The paean, a hymn of praise to Apollo and often to other gods, was sung as a prayer for safety or deliverance at battles and other important occasions. to the sea around us, is instead an advertisement for the artificial reefs the company makes from its redundant oil rigs. Gasoline, it adds, is really a form of solar power. Channel One, now owned by Primedia, is another way kids get corporate messages in school. Schools get free televisions and satellite hookups; Channel One gets captive kids for a 12-minute daily program, complete with frequent commercial interruptions. Over the course of a year, the TV breaks take out a whole week of learning. According to Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) is a media criticism organization based in New York, New York, founded in 1986. FAIR describes itself on its website as "the national media watch group" and defines its mission as working to "invigorate the First Amendment by , a whopping 80 percent of Channel One's airtime is devoted to advertising, and only 20 percent to news stories. San Jose, California San Jose (IPA: /ˌsænhoʊˈzeɪ/) is the third-largest city in California, and the tenth-largest in the United States. It is the county seat of Santa Clara County. successfully turned off Channel One at Overfelt High School. Veronica Sanchez, a founder of the grassroots group UNPLUG, called the company's programming "Mickey Mouse news." Vicky Anderson, an Overfelt teacher, said, "I am tired of selling myself, other teachers and students to any form of advertising." Tim Grant, co-editor of Green Teacher magazine, based in Canada, would like to see commercial messages removed from the schoolroom, but he also wants ads to be a learning experience. "It behooves teachers to become good crap detectors," he says, "and students must be equipped to recognize bias." Greening the Ivory Tower One of the most positive trends is the increase in environmental education programs on the campuses of American colleges and universities, where they are less subject to the influence of state legislatures and individual pressure groups. According to The Class of 2000 Report, 150 universities offer degrees in environmental science, and another 400 offer programs of varying size. Although that may seem a paltry amount considering that the U.S. has 3,700 colleges and universities, it is a major improvement over 30 years ago, when the major was almost unknown. In fact, the environment is now a central focus of the curriculum at such schools as The College of the Atlantic Curriculum The school's curriculum is based on human ecology, and every freshman is required to take an introductory core course in human ecology during their first term. in Maine and Hocking College in Ohio. Many of the programs emphasize hands-on work. At Brown University in Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches. , for instance, students have helped a low-income neighborhood through analysis of indoor and outdoor lead contamination levels. At the University of Virginia, a series of interdisciplinary courses and fellowships focus on the health and cleanup of a river near the school's campus. At Tufts University, an EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. grant created the Cooperation, Learning and Environmental Awareness Now! (CLEAN) program, which proposes a systematic overhaul of the university's own operations. According to Sarah Hammond Creighton in her book Greening the Ivory Tower, "Colleges and universities are microcosms of society's systems to house and feed people, conduct research, and administer programs, so their operations have many of the same consequences and opportunities for the environment as homes, offices, restaurants and hotels." In the recent React poll, 15-year-old Kel says that recycling is "a habit that my family got into. I don't really think about it; I just do it." Environmental attitudes are becoming ingrained in a generation, and that's precisely why it has raised such a ruckus. The charge that kids are being "scared green" has little reality on the grassroots educational level. Just ask Oliver Barton, founder of Common Ground School in New Haven, Connecticut, if the inner city high school kids he works with, 80 percent of whom are from minority groups, are being scared to death by the charter school's environmental curriculum. "Our kids are more afraid of the natural environment than afraid the world will end," Barton says. "It's not like they feel that if they eat another bag of potato chips, everyone will die. Awareness and behavior change very slowly, so we're just trying to get them interested in the environmental trade-offs they make every day." Starting that long, slow climb to awareness and behavior change is also the spirit behind Dragonfly dragonfly, any insect of the order Odonata, which also includes the damselfly. Members of this order are generally large predatory insects and characteristically have chewing mouthparts and four membranous, net-veined wings; they undergo complete metamorphosis. : A Magazine for Young Investigators, which is published bimonthly bi·month·ly adj. 1. Happening every two months. 2. Happening twice a month; semimonthly. adv. 1. Once every two months. 2. Twice a month; semimonthly. n. pl. by the National Science Teachers Association. Colorful, themed issues (a recent one was about space exploration) feature fact-based articles that are both for and by students. The fifth graders at Newman Elementary School in Needham, Massachusetts conducted an interview with Andy Thomas, a NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. astronaut on board the Mir space station. Student Chris Miller wanted to know if the station is going to get recycled. "It will probably be disassembled and its parts will be left in space to burn up in the atmosphere," Thomas told the kids. Dragonfly Editor Chris Myers, a professor at Miami University in Ohio, has a clear goal in mind. "The magazine is a recognition of the need to hear children's voices on the future of the planet," he says. "We call kids `investigators.' Models that rely on memorization displace children's curiosity from the center of learning. Environmental education is at the core of science education, and the two have to be brought closer together." That's exactly what happens at Common Ground, where the 80 students, most of whom had previously seen domestic animals only on their plates, do the chores on a working organic farm, with vegetable and herb gardens, as well as goats, sheep, pigs and chickens. Many of the math, biology and science courses are hands-on, through such activities as using compasses and old maps to uncover an overgrown overgrown said of a part that has not been kept trimmed. overgrown hoof overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole. 1933 nature trail. They may not become environmental activists, but they will definitely broaden their horizons. And that's what going to school is supposed to be all about. CONTACT: Common Ground High School, 358 Springside Avenue, New Haven, CT 06515/(203)389-4333; Environmental Education and Training Partnership, 1825 Connecticut Avenue NW, 8th Floor, Washington, DC 20009-5708/(202) 884-8828; The National Environmental Education and Training Foundation, 734 15th Street NW, Suite 420, Washington, DC 20005/(202)628-8200; North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Association for Environmental Education, PO Box 400, Troy, OH 45373/ (706)764-2926. RELATED ARTICLE: The Good Fight: five Educational Campaigners Audubon Expedition Institute The Audubon Expedition Institute is a traveling college that explores the United States and the world in the course of facilitating extraordinary educational experiences for a small number of undergraduate and graduate students. Twenty-one strangers, a schoolbus, a campus as large as North America and a common goal: to study firsthand the cultural, biological, political and economic issues related to the environment. The bus is the students' library; the ground is their bed. The rules of the road? As AlE graduate Meagan Ledendecker puts it, "Adapt, hold fast and continue to absorb." AIE AIE Adventures in Education AIE Associazione Italiana Editori (Italy) AIE Arts in Education AIE Associazione Italiana di Epidemiologia AIE Applied Information Economics AIE Australian Institute of Energy , founded in 1969, is a fully-accredited college and graduate degree program affiliated with Boston's Lesley College Graduate School and the National Audubon Society The National Audubon Society is an American non-profit environmental organization dedicated to conservancy. Incorporated in 1905, it is one of the oldest of such organizations in the world. . Every semester, 18 students and three faculty members study one region of the U.S. or Canada. While other environmental studies majors sit in lecture halls, AIE students are touring ancient forests, studying the effects of deforestation deforestation Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use. . They're also helping neighborhoods fight environmental injustice and learning about watersheds in the Appalachian Mountains. "If they didn't already have a sense of wonder and empowerment when they came in, they do when they leave," admissions director Melanie West says. AIE students learn not only from the faculty members and each other, but also from the government officials, activists, industry leaders, authors and scientists they meet along the way. And the stars they sleep under teach a class of their own. CONTACT: Audubon Expedition Institute, PO Box 365, Department PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction. PCR abbr. polymerase chain reaction Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) , Belfast, ME 04915/(207)338-5859. The Institute for Earth Education This Illinois-based institute teaches people "to understand our relationship with our planet, and to make much-needed changes to our lifestyles," said Laurie Farber, international membership coordinator. Growing out of a series of college-and camp-based workshops in 1974, Earth Education creates complete education programs to help children from 10 to 14 (and, soon, both older and younger kids) learn about basic ecological processes and the interconnectedness of all life. Programs with colorful names like Sunship Earth, Earth Caretakers and Earthkeepers now reach tens of thousands of kids a year in schools, nature centers and parks from Australia to Scotland. CONTACT: Institute for Earth Education, Cedar Cove, Greenville, WV 24945/(304)832-6404. Project Learning Tree More than 30 states require environmental education programs, but who's going to teach the teachers? That's where Washington-based Project Learning Tree (PLT PLT psittacosis-lymphogranuloma venereum-trachoma (group); see Chlamydia. PLT psittacosis-lymphogranuloma venereum-trachoma (group). ) comes in. PLT holds educator workshop programs in all 50 states and eight foreign countries (Japan and Brazil included), and the more than 40,000 teachers who pass through each year come home with a comprehensive package of materials to supplement the K-8 and high school curricula. The lessons are interdisciplinary and have wide application. For instance, Casey Harris, an educator in Hastings, Michigan, uses PLT materials to develop early child ecology programs at Binder Park Zoo Binder Park Zoo is a zoo located near Battle Creek, Michigan, which features a large array of exotic animals and plants, including their Wild Africa Exhibit. Binder Park Zoo is one of the largest zoos in Michigan. . The emphasis, according to Tess Erb, PLT project coordinator, "is on learning by doing, instead of having things thrown at the kids lecture-style. If the topic is the water cycle, the learning tools are clouds and puddles." In one lesson, kids build an "environmental exchange box," gathering some of the natural things around them and sending them to other schools. "We're not just training teachers," says Erb. "We're reaching kids, and the kids are learning and having fun." CONTACT: Project Learning Tree, 1111 19th Street NW, Suite 780, Washington, DC 20036/ (202)463-2457. Project WILD The project, which has trained more than 600,000 educators since 1983, has a special emphasis on reaching urban areas, where the environment can be an abstract concept. In a crime-ridden neighborhood in Denver, for example, students at Hallet Elementary School are developing a "sensory garden," featuring a geological and wildlife study area. In Indianapolis, seventh graders at Northview Middle School are equipping community parks with bat houses. The goal, says Project WILD, is to teach youth how to think--not what to think --about the environment. "We work with the wildlife kids have around them, starting with birds and squirrels," says Donna Asbury, Project WILD's director. "Wildlife is a natural connector for children." CONTACT: Project WILD, 707 Conservation Lane, Suite 305, Gaithersburg, MD 20878/(301) 527-8900. North American Association for Environmental Education Only a third of this professional association's 15,000 members are formal classroom teachers. The others are "non-traditional" educators who work for zoos, nature centers, park services and industry. "The public may not think of some of these people as educators, but that's what they are," says Joan Haley, deputy director of outreach programs. "We try to work across the different disciplines in a non-advocacy way, encouraging professors to talk to zoo people and government folks, with the aim of building community support for solid environmental education." CONTACT: North American Association for Environmental Education, 1825 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20009/(202)884-8912. --Jim Motavalli, Tina Ross and Katherine Kerlin |
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