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	<title>CLEARING: A Resource Journal of Environmental and Place-based Education &#187; nature centers</title>
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		<title>Climate Change, Youth and Hope: Debunking the Paradox</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1759</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1759#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 23:29:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Megan McGinty</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blogs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Climate change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Megan McGinty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Outdoor education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global warming]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[by Megan McGinty
North Cascades Institute
Last year we began a service-learning summer program for high school students focusing on climate change. The Climate Challenge program consisted of a summer residency in the North Cascades followed by a service project in which elementary-school students were taught by the returning high-school students back in their home communities that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>by Megan McGinty</strong><a href="http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/CCC-Reidel_Baker-500x3321.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-1998" title="CCC-Reidel_Baker-500x332" src="http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/CCC-Reidel_Baker-500x3321.jpg" alt="CCC-Reidel_Baker-500x332" width="360" height="239" /></a><br />
North Cascades Institute</p>
<p>Last year we began a service-learning summer program for high school students focusing on climate change. The Climate Challenge program consisted of a summer residency in the North Cascades followed by a service project in which elementary-school students were taught by the returning high-school students back in their home communities that fall. We planned a challenging field itinerary for the summer portion &#8211; studying glaciers, interviewing scientists and exploring hydrological systems. The student team made both geographic and intellectual discoveries and practiced presentation skills in order to bring their stories to their hometowns. We anticipated that they would struggle to master new skills, become proficient communicators, and hoped that they would become passionate teachers.</p>
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		<title>Interview: Saul Weisberg</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1262</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1262#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Apr 2010 21:00:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>author</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perspectives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ecoliteracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[environmental citizenship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global warming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nature centers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Non-formal]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://clearingmagazine.org/online/?p=1262</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
This interview is the first in a series that will be a regular feature in Clearing. Check back each month for a new interview with a leading environmental educator in the Pacific Northwest.
Saul Weisberg is executive director and co-founder of North Cascades  Institute. He is an ecologist, naturalist and writer who has explored  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/saulweisberg.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1263" title="saulweisberg" src="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/saulweisberg-300x225.jpg" alt="saulweisberg" width="300" height="225" /></a></p>
<p><em>This interview is the first in a series that will be a regular feature in Clearing. Check back each month for a new interview with a leading environmental educator in the Pacific Northwest.</em></p>
<p><strong>Saul Weisberg</strong> is executive director and co-founder of North Cascades  Institute. He is an ecologist, naturalist and writer who has explored  the mountains and rivers of the Pacific Northwest for more than 30  years. Saul worked throughout the Northwest as a field biologist, fire  lookout, commercial fisherman and National Park Service climbing ranger  before starting the Institute in 1986. He authored <em>From the Mountains  to the Sea, North Cascades: The Story behind the Scenery, Teaching for  Wilderness</em>, and <em>Living with Mountains</em>. Saul serves on the  board of directors of the Association of Nature Center Administrators,  the Natural History Network, and the Environmental Education Association  of Washington. He is adjunct faculty at Huxley College of the  Environment at Western Washington University. Saul lives near the shores  of the Salish Sea in Bellingham, Washington with his wife and  daughters.</p>
<p>Clearing talked to Saul on April 12, 2010:</p>
<p><strong>You were the co-founder of the North Cascades Institute in 1986 and have been its executive director ever since. What changes have you seen in the field of environmental education over the years?<span id="more-1262"></span></strong></p>
<p>I’ve seen a big increase in the extent and rigor with which EE is pursued over the past 30 years. The various fields within EE (outdoor education, adventure education, conservation education) have blended and cross-pollinated each other. Now we see meaningful discussion of issues of social and economic justice, worker’s rights, and sustainability that bring even more people into the EE community.</p>
<p>I’m inspired by the recent emergence of E3 Washington as a powerful force to connect educators, environmentalists and the business community. I think that’s the future of EE – to grow beyond environmental education into true, deep, interdisciplinary, education for all – good education that really makes a difference in our communities.</p>
<p><strong>How has the North Cascades Institute adapted to those changes?</strong></p>
<p>We started out as a field-based organization focusing on natural and cultural history. That’s still at our core. Our mission is to conserve and restore Northwest environments through education – so at heart we’re a conservation organization whose tool is education. That sets us apart from many of our peers, and influences how our board and staff look at issues. It’s not just about doing good education, it’s about effecting positive change on the landscape of home.</p>
<p>We’ve been successful because we pay attention to the world as it changes around us. We listen to the scientists, pay attention to trends in public land management, learn from discussions by writers and bloggers. We’re always asking what’s the next thing that the public, and the schools, need to know. What do we need to pay attention to now, in 2010?</p>
<p><strong>How did the recession affect the activities at NCI over the past couple of years?</strong></p>
<p>Well it scared us into paying attention even more than we normally pay attention – which is quite a lot. Early in 2009 the schools were really worried about the state budget and we had a fairly significant number of schools pull out of spring programs. Our leadership team at the NCI met every Monday throughout the year, looking at trends, refocusing prioritities, and keeping close watch on the budget. We didn&#8217;t fill a couple of positions we would have filled in a normal year, and had to pull back in some other areas to focus on our priority youth programs. And we had a two-week unpaid furlough for all staff at the end of the year. The result of all this was that we ended the year really strongly – in the black, with several new initiatives successfully launched, and with a stronger staff and programs than when we began.</p>
<p><strong>Tell me about some of those new initiatives at NCI. What are people excited about these days? I saw that you have recently acquired a 36-foot Salish canoe. It&#8217;s a thing of beauty, by the way.</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/salishcanoe1.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1270" title="salishcanoe" src="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/salishcanoe1-300x200.jpg" alt="salishcanoe" width="300" height="200" /></a>The new canoe is a beauty. It&#8217;s a traditional Salish design in fiberglass, holds up to 18 paddlers, black hull, &#8220;oxblood&#8221; interior (it was made in Canada and that&#8217;s what they said). I love these big canoes. You can have a really diverse group in them, big people, small people, people in wheelchairs, and everyone is pulling together, talking and laughing, and seeing the world from a different perspective together.</p>
<p>The other project which we piloted in 2009, is &#8220;Cascades Climate Challenge.&#8221; Last year we brought 20 kids (4 each from DC, Chicago, Denver, SF and Seattle) to the North Cascades for 33 days to study climate change. Then they went home to begin field projects with their high schools and partner elementary schools. Then we took them to Washington DC for a week to meet and share with government officials. It was very, very powerful. We&#8217;ve got a bunch of videos up on our website about all of these programs. This year it’s expanding into 2, 3-week programs for a total of 40 kids, but all from WA and OR. Got to reduce the carbon footprint of a climate program&#8230;.</p>
<p><strong>Speaking of which, are you seeing evidence of climate change in the North Cascades?</strong></p>
<p>The North Cascades have more glaciers than any other area of North America outside of Alaska. And they are dramatically shrinking. Mountains that I climbed 30 years ago now show rock and snow where there used to be ice. We’ve developed programs to focus attention on the challenge of climate change, and how human communities will have to adapt. These summer programs for high school students are some of the most exciting and rewarding work I’ve ever done.</p>
<p><strong>Are you concerned about the seeming growth in anti-science, climate change-denying elements in society?</strong></p>
<p>There always will be people who don&#8217;t want to think for themselves, or believe what the facts are saying. I think it&#8217;s worth engaging with them, to a point. We try to keep our focus on education, sharing information along with the affects of that knowledge on society. If we know something is threatening the planet we have an obligation to speak up, but also to be compassionate towards others who don&#8217;t agree with us. Issues like climate change will be with us forever. It&#8217;s worth taking the time to get it right.</p>
<p>But we can&#8217;t take too much time.</p>
<p><strong>What do you think the future holds for non-formal education centers like NCI?</strong></p>
<p>A recent editorial in the journal Nature pointed out that much of what people know about science is learned informally through time spent in the field, at nature centers, museums, zoos and aquaria. It goes on to say that education policy-makers should take note. We’ve been taking note of that for years. People learn best through deep, intimate experiences in nature. That’s what all of us in EE strive to provide.</p>
<p><strong>What gives you the most pleasure in your role as Director of NCI?</strong></p>
<p>Working with people. Making a difference. Seeing people get turned on by something they learn at one of our programs. Bringing in a big grant. Getting a clean audit. Hanging out at the Learning Center at Diablo Lake on a spring evening with a glass of wine, watching peregrine falcons soaring along the cliffs.</p>
<p><strong>Where do you go when you need to reconnect with nature?</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/saulincanoe.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1271" title="saulincanoe" src="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/saulincanoe-300x199.jpg" alt="saulincanoe" width="300" height="199" /></a>I go paddling on one of our local lakes in my 16’ solo canoe. It’s a quick way for me to reconnect with what’s blooming, which birds are singing, and with myself. This time of year the canoe often lives on top of my car. I do spend less time in the backcountry than I used to, and that bother me. This is the year for that to change. I need to get back into the high country.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Do you have a favorite place in the Pacific Northwest to visit?</strong></p>
<p>Let’s see – mountains, rivers, ocean, eastside, westside… it’s all my favorite place. But I do love the northern stretches of the Olympic coast, any high ridgeline in the North Cascades, the Pasayten Wilderness, Malheur and Steens Mountain in Oregon.</p>
<p><strong>It has been noted that most the great naturalists and nature writers could point to events in their childhood that led to their affinity for nature and their future work on environmental issues. What was your first nature experience that influenced your life?</strong></p>
<p>Camping with my family at age 6 in Algonquin Provincial Park. We started a family tradition of spending 5 weeks each summer camping in parks throughout the US and Canada, often going back to the same place year after year. Those places became home to us, we stopped being tourists and felt like we really became part of the land.</p>
<p><strong>Who is/are your environmental hero(es)?</strong></p>
<p>Everyone who is looking at birds and bugs and flowers, teaching kids, and challenging themselves and each other to get busy and save the world. We’ve all got to pull together.</p>
<p><strong> What are you currently reading?</strong></p>
<p><em>The Collected Poems of Kenneth Rexroth</em>, <em>Wild Comfort, the Solace of Nature</em> by Kathleen Dean Moore,  and <em>Insectopedia</em> by Hugh Raffles.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Are you optimistic about the future?</strong></p>
<p>I&#8217;m not optimistic, but I am hopeful. I believe that we can change the world, save the world. There&#8217;s a quote by E.B. White that I really like. It goes like this&#8230; “I arise in the morning, torn between a desire to save the world, and a desire to savor the world. That makes it hard to plan the day.”</p>
<p>I think most of us understand what he was talking about. In my mind, a good day is when we can do both – savor and save the world. I like to think that’s our job.</p>
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		<title>Perspectives: A reflection on teaching environmental education</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1231</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/1231#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Apr 2010 21:08:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>author</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Outdoor education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perspectives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[environmental citizenship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General public]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nature centers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Non-formal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teacher training]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://clearingmagazine.org/online/?p=1231</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
by Julie Corotis
Children were taken hostage in Russia, thousands died in Iraq and Afghanistan, and bombs were detonated in Palestine and Israel. All of these events have occurred while I have been an environmental educator at IslandWood. How these events define my role as an environmental educator may seem obscure at first, but they are [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/img_students2.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-1236" title="img_students" src="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/img_students2.jpg" alt="img_students" width="180" height="241" /></a><br />
<strong>by Julie Corotis</strong></p>
<p>Children were taken hostage in Russia, thousands died in Iraq and Afghanistan, and bombs were detonated in Palestine and Israel. All of these events have occurred while I have been an environmental educator at IslandWood. How these events define my role as an environmental educator may seem obscure at first, but they are actually paramount to my decision to devote my life to this career.</p>
<p>I began to question the value of environmental or outdoor education last September when I read reports of the hostage crisis in Russia. Children were sacrificed for political gain while I was preparing to teach children about ecosystems.  My career choice and what was needed in the world did not seem to be congruent. I could not see how what I was doing was alleviating suffering and dissipating hate. I wondered why it is important to teach children the abiotic parts of an ecosystem when there is a current of hate running through our society. Through this ongoing monologue I realized what role I want to play in environmental education. I want to help children build relationships and a sense of community in hopes that they will leave their experience with me a bit more likely to make positive choices.</p>
<p>I do not believe that children should grow up thinking that the environment is the world’s greatest problem, and it is their duty to save it, which some refer to as the ‘gloom and doom’ approach. Personally, I think that social problems have greater potential to exterminate humans long before we have a chance to kill the planet. The point of this polemic is that I believe children should be taught the value of treating everything with respect, which includes the natural world.</p>
<p>My role as an environmental educator is to teach about the environment, both natural and human-made, and to help others see and value the relationships in and between both. At IslandWood I spend a significant part of 4-day School Overnight Program discussing communities, those in a watershed or ecosystem, our group’s and their home community. Mornings begin with a focus question, which I have altered so that they are broader and can have answers that apply to the students’ own life. For example, “What is an ecosystem?” becomes “What is a community?,” so that human and natural communities can be discussed. The final question of the week “What can I do to make the world a better place?” can have myriad answers that connect their experiences at IslandWood and their lives back home.</p>
<p>I think that the experience of being outdoors in a small community can change people’s lives in extraordinary ways. The setting removes familiar pressures and attitudes, the people often feel freer to be themselves, and the experience is interesting. The combination of environmental education in the outdoors has had a great role in bringing me to this point in my life. I have lived, worked and studied in small communities in nature and believe that I am a better person because of it. I have facilitated these experiences for others and am consistently amazed by its impact. Patience, tolerance, respect and gratitude are virtues that can grow from environmental education, and I believe that these virtues are what is needed to save the world.<br />
<em><br />
Julie Corotis is a graduate student of the IslandWood School on Bainbridge Island, Washington.</em></p>
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		<title>The Window into Green</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/865</link>
		<comments>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/865#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:31:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>author</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General public]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perspectives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ecoliteracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ecological literacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[environmental citizenship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global education]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Weilbacher]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ 
by Mike Weilbacher
With the new wave of interest in the environment, will we finally give students the tools they need to become environmentally literate citizens?
In just a few weeks, high school seniors all around the United States will walk proudly across stages, hoisting their diplomas as they graduate from formal K–12 education. As their [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>by Mike Weilbacher</strong></p>
<p>With the new wave of interest in the environment, will we finally give students the tools they need to become environmentally literate citizens?</p>
<p>In just a few weeks, high school seniors all around the United States will walk proudly across stages, hoisting their diplomas as they graduate from formal K–12 education. As their teachers, we&#8217;ll look on with some wistfulness, for the world into which they are graduating—one of spiraling financial crises coupled with huge international challenges—is vastly different from the one in which they started their senior year only 10 months ago.</p>
<p>But wait, it gets worse. If you place your finger on the pulse of the planet, this is what you&#8217;ll discover: global surface temperatures rising, glaciers melting, oceans warming, sea levels rising, rain forests burning, coral reefs dying, old-growth forests disappearing, deserts spreading, the world&#8217;s population increasing, and species vanishing at the highest rates since the extinction of the dinosaurs.</p>
<p>In short, the ecology that underpins our economy is also collapsing. And the solutions to this challenge elude not only most of our graduates, but also us—their teachers, administrators, and parents.</p>
<p>Will our graduates be ready for these new realities? Will they confidently stride into this world as college students, workers, voters, consumers—in short, as competent, caring adults capable of making good decisions on the pressing issues of the day?<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong><span id="more-865"></span>Environmental Ignorance</strong></p>
<p>Forty years ago, in the first issue of the Journal of Environmental Education, William B. Stapp (1969) defined the goal of the nascent field of environmental education as producing a citizenry that &#8220;is knowledgeable concerning the biophysical environment and its associated problems, aware of how to help solve these problems, and motivated to work toward their solution&#8221; (p. 30).</p>
<p>Today, a new U.S. president actively seeks approval from the American people for repairing the economic collapse while preventing the ecological one. There will be fierce pressure on President Obama to forego environmental projects in lieu of economic ones. Have the past 40 years of environmental education met Stapp&#8217;s challenge and created the environmentally literate citizenry we need to negotiate the coming trade-offs?</p>
<p>In a word, no.</p>
<p>A typical high school student is aware of environmental issues, has discussed and debated climate change or rain forest loss in some class sometime, and might have bumper-sticker answers to lapel-pin questions. But do our students know where the trash goes when it leaves their house? The leading source of greenhouse gas emissions? Why we recycle? (Glass and aluminum, after all, are not rare resources.) If you ask a group of students what we can do to combat the warming trend, several will chime in that we need to remove chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) from hair spray. (Many high schoolers conflate global warming with ozone depletion and haven&#8217;t been told that CFCs were removed from the market 20 years ago.)</p>
<p>My organization surveyed high school students on these questions and more and discovered that although students are overwhelmingly &#8220;pro-environment,&#8221; they possess remarkably little information about breaking environmental issues. One small example: We asked them to name one bird they can identify by song. The leading answer? None. If local birds disappear from the landscape because of extinction, or arrive three weeks late because of warming climates, it&#8217;s possible that no one will notice.</p>
<p>Oh, there are numerous bright spots in the environmental education movement, but progress is hardly keeping up with the increasingly urgent issues that face us today. When Stapp coined his definition four decades ago, the United States was riding a wave of interest in the environment triggered by the Santa Barbara oil spill, Ohio&#8217;s Cuyahoga River catching fire, Lake Erie being declared biologically dead, and charismatic birds like eagles and peregrine falcons vanishing. As we addressed these issues, the wave crested, and interest in ecology quickly ebbed.</p>
<p>Today, even though an interest in green ideas is resurging, the issues are far more global, complex, and intertwined with politics. Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels currently exceed 385 parts per million, almost 40 percent higher than pre–Industrial Revolution levels, and they are rising every year. Consequently, the Arctic Ocean is changing dramatically as the Arctic warms more quickly than anyone expected, and our graduates may see an ice-free polar cap in the summer in their lifetimes.</p>
<p>An International Union for the Conservation of Nature report (2008) noted that one in four of the world&#8217;s mammals are at risk of extinction from habitat loss, poaching, and climate change. Many critically important rivers—such as the Nile, the Yellow, and the Colorado—no longer empty water into the sea. Mountains of discarded cell phones and computers make their way to destitute Chinese villages, where they are picked apart for valuable metals, exposing the villagers to high concentrations of incredibly toxic materials.</p>
<p>To address today&#8217;s geopolitically entangled world of large, complex eco-issues, students simply have to know more than they did 40 years ago.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s the Problem?</strong></p>
<p>Four issues have become huge obstacles to environmental literacy. First, students are extraordinarily disconnected from the environment. Richard Louv&#8217;s revelatory 2005 book Last Child in the Woods called attention to a world of children rapidly retreating from outdoor play and time spent in nature. Instead, modern kids stay indoors, &#8220;&#8217;cause that&#8217;s where all the electrical outlets are,&#8221; as one 4th grader famously said (p. 10).</p>
<p>Viewing screens has become a child&#8217;s full-time job. Kids are plugged in 24/7, watching an average of 25 hours of TV a week (Gentile &amp; Walsh, 2002) and then logging additional screen time on the Internet, browsing the Web, playing video games, and engaging in whole new verbs, like IMing and Facebooking. Louv coined the phrase nature-deficit disorder to describe the &#8220;human costs of alienation from nature&#8221; (p. 34), including diminished use of the senses, attention difficulties, and higher rates of physical and emotional illness. Just when students need contact with nature more than ever, they have abandoned it.</p>
<p>Second, ask any environmental educator and he or she will bemoan No Child Left Behind, whose pressures have caused many schools to trade outdoor field trips for test prep. Science teachers routinely eliminate such concepts as environmental education, which do not appear to relate directly to questions on the tests. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation&#8217;s Web site (2009) bluntly states, &#8220;No Child Left Behind is contributing to an increasing environmental literacy gap by reducing the amount of environmental education taking place in K–12 classrooms.&#8221;</p>
<p>Third, students&#8217; exposure to environmental education depends on the luck of the draw and the amalgam of the interests of whichever teachers they happen to have throughout their school career. In my daughters&#8217; school, there were two 5th grade teachers, one contagiously obsessed with birds and birdwatching and the other in love with Broadway musicals. One class went on an all-day birding trip; the other performed a play for the entire school. Both are equally interesting and important activities, but why didn&#8217;t the two cross-pollinate and give all 5th graders equal access to both? My daughters caught the birding bug, but one-half of the 5th grade never saw a nesting piping plover.</p>
<p>And finally, the downside of the large nonprofit universe of environmental education facilities—zoos, museums, aquariums, nature centers, parks, arboretums, children&#8217;s gardens—is that schools approach environmental education like a Chinese menu. They pick a field trip from column A and a lesson plan from column B; toss in an occasional Earth Day assembly, litter pickup, and letter to the president; and assume that their charges are now environmentally literate. And the nonprofits, wanting students to return the following year, emphasize fun over content, immersing the students in activity-based education that is designed to serve as an appetizer for environmental literacy but ends up becoming the main course. They often retreat from tough concepts like water shortages and stay with politically lighter ones like the water cycle.</p>
<p>The upshot? Even though there are more centers for environmental education and more college degree programs in environment-related fields than ever, and even though building green schools has suddenly emerged as an important idea (pre-economic meltdown), we are perhaps even farther from environmental literacy than we were in 1969.</p>
<p>Students are graduating from our schools thinking that green is good. But we haven&#8217;t given them the tools they need to become environmentally literate citizens.<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>New Research May Turn the Tide</strong></p>
<p>Fortunately, several important research efforts are threading their way through the education system. For example, the Children and Nature Network, a Web-based organization (www.childrenandnature.org) that reports a wide variety of data and activities related to repairing the nature deficit disorder, showcases data illuminating the educational benefits of immersing students in the outdoors and environmental education experiences. And there&#8217;s tons of data.</p>
<p>The American Institutes for Research (2005) studied the effects of weeklong residential outdoor education programs in which most of the participants were at-risk youth. Comparing students who experienced the outdoor education program with those in a control group who had not had the experience, the researchers found a 27 percent increase in measured mastery of science concepts, plus enhanced cooperation and conflict-resolution skills, higher self-esteem, and gains in problem solving, motivation, and classroom behavior.</p>
<p>A Canadian study found that children whose school grounds include diverse natural settings are more physically active, more aware of nutrition, more civil to one another, and more creative (Bell &amp; Dyment, 2006). Another study discovered that children playing in green settings have reduced symptoms of attention deficit disorder (Taylor, Kuo, &amp; Sullivan, 2001).</p>
<p>The more studies are published, the more they agree: Exposure to nature raises test scores; increases creativity, cooperation, and self-confidence; reduces stress; and enhances cognitive abilities.<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Promising Models</strong></p>
<p>When the next wave of environmental interest washes over our schools, as it inevitably will, this body of research will support the new ideas for truly fulfilling Stapp&#8217;s dream of environmental literacy. Here are a few intriguing efforts now underway.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">No Child Left Inside</span></p>
<p>In response to Louv&#8217;s book, more than 1,000 nonprofits with almost 50 million members have launched a variety of efforts loosely organized under the title &#8220;No Child Left Inside.&#8221; For instance, the National Audubon Society has pledged to place a family-oriented nature center in every congressional district. Connecticut governor M. Jodi Rell launched a special Web site (www.nochildleftinside.org) promoting state parks, an idea copied by many other states. And the U.S. Congress has considered a No Child Left Inside act that would provide federal funding for environmental literacy plans and for state efforts to train teachers in model environmental education programming, including outdoor learning. In the last session, the act passed the House, and supporters are eager to try again in the new Congress.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Green Charter Schools</span></p>
<p>For better or worse, the charter school movement has been sweeping across the United States in the last decade. A growing number of charter schools have been designed around the simple premise that the entire science curriculum can be taught through environmental education.</p>
<p>The Green Woods Charter School in Philadelphia is located on the campus of the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education, a 340-acre living laboratory of forests and fields, streams and ponds. The center&#8217;s naturalists are integrated into the science faculty of the school, and the students spend quality time immersed in the woods.</p>
<p>Wisconsin&#8217;s River Crossing Environmental Charter School, located in a one-room schoolhouse, provides a hands-on curriculum with subjects integrated through environmental studies. Students in 7th and 8th grade participate weekly in field trips and real-world ecosystem restoration projects, such as restoring the prairie and building rain gardens for storm water.</p>
<p>Other sites include California&#8217;s Environmental Charter High School, Connecticut&#8217;s Common Ground High School, and Florida&#8217;s Academy of Environmental Sciences. A Green Charter Schools Network (www.greencharterschools.org) has formed to assist teachers and staff. Sadly, precious few students are fortunate enough to attend these schools.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Environment as an Integrating Context for Learning</span></p>
<p>Another innovation that has grown in popularity in the last decade is the Environment as an Integrating Context for Learning movement, a cumbersome name for a simple concept. In place of the rigorously scheduled school day of science, English, and gym periods, these programs use the environment and the outdoors as the centerpiece of students&#8217; curriculum. This format breaks down barriers between disciplines, stresses team building and individualized learning, and involves students in real-world community issues.</p>
<p>In suburban Philadelphia, for example, the pioneering Watershed program at Radnor Middle School engages students in outdoor field studies all year, including stream testing, canoeing, trout rearing and release, and more. Students in the program spend all day together, except for math and foreign language classes, in which they are integrated with the rest of the school. Students hone their communication skills at conferences and youth summits.</p>
<p>One analysis of 40 Environment as an Integrating Context for Learning programs (Lieberman &amp; Hoody, 1998) discovered that students in these programs outscored their peers on standardized tests, had better grades, and acted more independently and responsibly. At one school using this approach, reports to the principal&#8217;s office declined 91 percent in the three-year study period.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Wood Kindergartens</span></p>
<p>A rather radical movement has leapt across the pond from Europe and, coupled with Richard Louv&#8217;s work, has begun making inroads in the United States. In the Wood School model, child care workers and youngsters ages 3–6 spend the entire day outdoors in nature. The program is held outdoors in all seasons, although the group moves indoors in extreme weather. Proponents of this process assert that playing outside for prolonged periods strengthens the students&#8217; immune systems and improves development of manual dexterity, physical coordination, tactile sensitivity, and depth perception.</p>
<p>Here in the United States, many nature centers, such as the Chippewa Nature Center in Midland, Michigan, have begun opening variants of Wood Kindergartens, versions that might not strictly adhere to the European&#8217;s outdoor component but still allow the students full and frequent access to natural areas and nature-based play (Reynolds, 2007).</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Greening of the Culture</span></p>
<p>U.S. schools teach what American culture considers important. Once society decided that computer literacy was central to a solid education, computer classes invaded schools at warp speed, and the &#8220;digital divide&#8221; became an important and contentious issue.</p>
<p>As environmental issues heat up (pardon the pun), the culture is coming to consensus—again—on the importance of the environment. Green cable channels, green Web sites, eco-chic clothing, green roofs on green buildings, and innumerable products made from recycled objects are beginning to infuse the culture with a newfound interest in sustainability—an interest that ideally will create a ground swell of support for environmental improvement.</p>
<p>But the four horsemen of the global apocalypse—warming, species loss, water scarcity, and population growth—are bearing down on us, and many environmentalists worry about a vanishing window of opportunity for addressing these issues. Science fiction writer H. G. Wells was prophetic when he wrote in 1920 that &#8220;human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.&#8221;</p>
<p>Environmental literacy is one race that education must win.</p>
<p><strong>What Every Student Should Know About the Environment</strong></p>
<p>There are scores of possible models of environmental education programs, and most have many of the following large concepts in common. As students go from kindergarten through high school, they can work their way down the list.</p>
<p><strong> 1. Earth overflows with life.</strong><br />
One of science&#8217;s biggest mysteries is how many species share this planet— estimates range from 5 million to 100 million species. Many environmental education programs begin with the premise that life is vanishing; young learners should first know that Earth teems with a huge number of creatures.</p>
<p><strong> 2. Each creature is uniquely adapted to its environment.</strong><br />
Every species evolved to possess a unique set of adaptations that enables it to survive and thrive in its ecosystem. Students should be on a first-name basis with many local creatures.</p>
<p><strong> 3. The web of life is interdependent.</strong><br />
Organisms evolve complex relationships, each depending on numerous other species for their survival.</p>
<p><strong> 4. Materials flow through ecosystems in cycles.</strong><br />
All creatures need water, air, and nutrients to survive. These materials cycle and recycle through ecosystems. The water we drink today is the same water we&#8217;ve always had, and always will.</p>
<p><strong> 5. The sun is the ultimate source of energy flowing through ecosystems.</strong><br />
Food grows from sunlight energy; our houses are heated by fossil fuels created many millennia ago from ancient sunlight.</p>
<p><strong>6. There is no waste in nature; everything is recycled.</strong><br />
In nature, every waste product is used by other creatures. Humans have bent those circles into straight lines, where things are used once and tossed.</p>
<p><strong>7. We consume resources to live.</strong><br />
Every student should know where the trash truck takes the trash, where water comes from, and how the nearest power plant makes electricity.</p>
<p><strong> 8. Conservation is the wise use of finite resources.</strong><br />
We are physical creatures with real needs—to eat, drink, build houses, write on paper. But how do we use these resources sustainably?</p>
<p><strong>9. Humans can have a profound effect on environmental systems.</strong><br />
Fossil fuels pump carbon dioxide into the sky; habitat loss is causing the extinction of large numbers of species. Our actions profoundly affect the ecological systems that sustain living things—and us. Nature can often repair these systems (forests grow back, for example); but humans are changing systems faster than nature can adapt.</p>
<p><strong> 10. Each of us can powerfully affect the fate of the natural world.</strong><br />
Because each of us is directly plugged into the planet, the actions we take—or fail to take—profoundly influence earth&#8217;s systems.</p>
<p><em>Mike Weilbacher is Director of the nonprofit Lower Merion Conservancy in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania. He travels the United States as an environmental educator, performer, and workshop presenter. E-mail: mike@dragonfly.org; Web site: www.mikeweilbacher.com; Blog: www.mikeweilbacher.blogspot.com.</em></p>
<p><strong><em>References</em></strong></p>
<p>American Institutes for Research. (2005). Effects of outdoor education programs for children in California. Palo Alto, CA: Author.</p>
<p>Bell, A. C., &amp; Dyment, J. E. (2006). Grounds for action: Promoting physical activity through school ground greening in Canada. Toronto: Evergreen.</p>
<p>Chesapeake Bay Foundation. (2009). What has NCLB done to environmental education? [Online]. Annapolis, MD: Author. Available: www.cbf.org/site/PageServer?pagename=act_sub_actioncenter_federal_nclb_done</p>
<p>Gentile, D. A., &amp; Walsh, D. A. (2002). A normative study of family media habits. Applied Developmental Psychology, 23, 157–178.</p>
<p>International Union for the Conservation of Nature. (2008). IUCN Red List reveals world&#8217;s mammals in crisis [Press release]. Gland, Switzerland: Author. Available: www.iucn.org/about/work/programmes/species/red_list/?1695/IUCN-Red-List-reveals-worlds-mammals-in-crisis</p>
<p>Lieberman, G. A., &amp; Hoody, L. L. (1998). Closing the achievement gap: Using the environment as an integrating context for learning. Poway, CA: State Education and Environment Roundtable.</p>
<p>Louv, R. (2005). Last child in the woods: Saving our children from nature-deficit disorder. Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.</p>
<p>Reynolds, C. (2007, January 22). Everybody in the vegetable patch! MacLeans, 42. Available: www.macleans.ca/education/universities/article.jsp?content=20070122_139722_139722</p>
<p>Stapp, W. B., et al. (1969). The concept of environmental education. Journal of Environmental Education, 1(1), 30–31.</p>
<p>Taylor, A. F., Kuo, F. E., &amp; Sullivan, W. C. (2001). Coping with ADD: The surprising connection to green play settings. Environment and Behavior, 33(1), 54–77.</p>
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		<title>The Green Tsunami:  Environmental Education in the 21 st Century</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/835</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2009 05:59:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[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 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-836" title="tidal-wave" src="http://clearingmagazine.org/online/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/tidal-wave.jpg" alt="tidal-wave" width="287" height="400" />By Mike Weilbacher</strong></p>
<p><em>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. </em></p>
<p>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:</p>
<p>Just what is Brad Pitt’s relationship to Angelina Jolie?</p>
<p>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.</p>
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		<title>Knowing One Big Thing: The Role of the Nature Center in the Next Millennium</title>
		<link>http://www.clearingmagazine.org/online/archives/423</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 20 May 2009 06:05:20 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[By Mike Weilbacher
From The Best of Clearing, Volume V
It’s a very rainy day in the middle of Aesop’s fables, and Hedgehog is stuck outside without a dry place to hide. He finds a den, but Fox already occupies it. After much begging and whining, Hedgehog squeezes in alongside Fox, raises her prickles, and a needled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By Mike Weilbacher</strong><br />
<em>From The Best of Clearing, Volume V</em></p>
<p>It’s a very rainy day in the middle of Aesop’s fables, and Hedgehog is stuck outside without a dry place to hide. He finds a den, but Fox already occupies it. After much begging and whining, Hedgehog squeezes in alongside Fox, raises her prickles, and a needled Fox quickly vacates his dry den to the now contented Hedgehog.</p>
<p>A fox knows many things, concludes Aesop, but the hedgehog knows One Big Thing: how to use prickers.</p>
<p>Which brings us to fuzzy little beasts called nature centers, a.k.a. environmental education centers. I carry an exquisite love-hate relationship with these beasts. As a freshly-scrubbed, greener-than-a-tree-frog college graduate, I was offered the irresistible opportunity of not only directing a small nature center tucked into the middle of central New Jersey, but directing it when its nature center building had just been erected! Imagine my luck, walking into a vacant building as my first full-time job and inventing a nature center.</p>
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<p><em>Mike Weilbacher is the executive director of the Lower Merion Conservancy, and is, he confesses, required to teach Too Many Things.</em></p>
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