Feb
17
A While in the Wild: Educating for Environmental Empathy
Filed Under Place-based Education, Programs | Leave a Comment
by Fay Mascher M.Ed., Cayley School
Jonas Cox Ph.D., Gonzaga University
Charles Salina Ph.D., Gonzaga University
On a visit to the coulee, a startled owl exploded off of a nest that we thought was empty. On the bus ride back to school, one boy reached for my hand, “Feel my heart,” he said. “It’s still going really fast.” –from the Cayley School action research project
Since the 1980’s, researchers in environmental education have explored this basic question: Why do some people care about the natural environment enough to protect it, while others do not? Current environmental education, taught as a unit of instruction within the science curriculum, tends to assume that imparting information about the environment will inspire students to care for it. But a generation of young people educated in this way has not yielded a generation of adults committed to caring for the natural world. Read more
Dec
22
Just Games
Filed Under Blogs, Outdoor education, Place-based Education, Tony Deis | Leave a Comment
Spear fishing invasive species is not a game
I’ve been teaching in outdoor education for nearly 18 years. I’ve also been a both a participant and facilitator in many workshops for teachers. There seems to be both a written and unwritten series of stock games and routines educators use to engage kids. Otter Steals Fish, Eagle Eye, Fox Walking and the list goes on and on.
They may make fantastic transitions and summations of experience, unfortunately this stale deck of cards often becomes the lazy crux of how teachers work with their students.
That’s the topic for my Trackers Kids blog.
Read the full blog at TrackersPDX.com>>
Jun
19
The Green Tsunami: Environmental Education in the 21 st Century
Filed Under Biological Diversity, Climate change, General public, Language arts, Non-formal, Outdoor education, Perspectives, Science, Social studies, Sustainability | Leave a Comment
By Mike Weilbacher
The following paper was presented as the keynote address at the 2005 conference of the Association of Nature Center Administrators (ANCA) at the Chippewa Nature Center in Midland, Michigan, August 2005. Mike is a former PAEE president, newsletter editor and Outstanding Environmental Educator (1991), and directs the Lower Merion Conservancy.
Global surface temperatures are rising, glaciers worldwide are melting, the ocean is warming, rainforests are burning, species are vanishing at the highest rates since the end of the Mesozoic, coral reefs are bleaching and dying, old growth forests are disappearing, deserts are spreading, the world’s population is rising, the future of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge hangs by a thread, the new energy bill left no lobbyist behind, yet much of the attention of the western world is preoccupied by a question critical to the fate of humankind:
Just what is Brad Pitt’s relationship to Angelina Jolie?
For the next hour or so, we’ll nibble at the edge of that question to see its importance to our work, but what we’ll really do is talk through the state of environmental education, looking at emerging trends and practice using our crystal balls to make predictions for the road ahead. We’re going to place our fingers on the pulse of popular culture and take a reading as to where we all stand.
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