Dear teachers,

Perhaps one of the most important challenges facing us today is climate
change/global warming. Saving the environment is something all of us need
to think about... and teachers need to bring into their teaching as well...
not only social science but science, language and all teachers!!

I am sharing an article on some experiences in bringing environment
conservation (and environmental literacy, stewardship, environmental
justice...) into teaching... please read and share. comments and
suggestions welcome...


regards,
Guru
source -
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/34976-we-can-t-solve-climate-change-without-teaching-it-why-more-classes-are-heading-outside

Sunday, 28 February 2016 / TRUTH-OUT.ORG
We Can't Solve Climate Change Without Teaching It - Why More Classes Are
Heading Outside
Saturday, 27 February 2016 00:00 By Kate Stringer, YES! Magazine | Report

Standing waist-deep in Connecticut's West River, Nyasia Mercer's mind is
far from the cold, murky water lapping against her rubber waders.
The high-schooler is thinking of people. The ones who swim here. Fish here.
The ones who unwittingly dump liquid waste into nearby sewers. And how few
of them know what swirls through their neighborhood waterway.

"It's sad," Mercer said. "A lot of these things could have been prevented
if the community knew how. A lot don't know how to advocate for themselves."

But self-advocacy isn't a problem for the students at Common Ground High
School in New Haven, where Mercer is a senior. She and her classmates spend
their school days sometimes literally waist-deep in environmental justice
issues. Common Ground, a charter school with almost 200 students,
integrates conservation, sustainability, and environmental studies into the
curriculum and across disciplines.

And it's not the only one. A handful of schools across the United States
are finding place-based learning creates a valuable connection between
students' local environment and their education, especially during a time
of rapid climate change.

Environmentally-themed schools have grown in popularity since the early
1990s, fueled by increasing climate-change awareness, a push for smaller,
STEM-based schools, and a desire to connect an urban population of students
to nature, said Brigitte Griswold, director of youth programs at The Nature
Conservancy.

While climate change awareness has improved over the past two decades, U.S.
middle- and high-school classrooms spend an average of only one to two
hours per school year covering it, according to a survey of science
teachers published in the February 2016 issue of Science. And
misinformation abounds: Thirty percent of teachers say climate change is
likely caused by natural events; twelve percent don't emphasize a human
cause.

That's why it's so important to have schools that incorporate environmental
literacy across the curriculum, Griswold said. Every subject area is tied
in some way to the environment.  "If we don't have an environmentally
literate generation of young people trained, who will install the solar
panels, and retrofit buildings?" Griswold said. "The environment is
something everyone could be involved in and should be involved in."
Place-based learning isn't solely for the elite. Half of Common Ground's
student body qualifies for free or reduced-price lunch, and two-thirds are
black or Hispanic.

"What's really important is that (students) have the tools they need to
speak up for what they know is important," said Liz Cox, Common Ground's
director. "That they have the fundamental understanding of what it means to
live in a sustainable way."  One of the attractions of an environment-based
curriculum is that students find their work has real-world outcomes.
They're no longer doing work just for the sake of doing it.

Mercer and her classmates, for example, collected data on water quality,
which the school presented to the Environmental Protection Agency's New
England Environmental Justice Council. She and her peers also put up signs
near sewers adjacent to the river to warn community members against
polluting the waterway.

Their projects blossomed. Mercer has found herself planting trees around
Connecticut with the Urban Resources Initiative, walking in a New York City
2014 climate march, and cleaning up metal and glass strewn across Jamaica
Bay after Hurricane Sandy.  The Port Townsend School District in Washington
State, similar economically to Common Ground, is developing maritime-themed
schooling to match its surroundings: the tip of the Olympic Peninsula,
overlooking the Salish Sea. Grant funding allows teachers, experts, and
community partners to collaborate on curriculum design for the district's
nearly 1,200 students.

For example, last spring a science teacher interested in introducing robots
to his students contacted the Port Townsend Marine Science Center. Together
they designed a lesson for the high school seniors, which involved using
remotely operated vehicles to collect data on sea anemones living at the
bottom of a pier outside the science center. For that project, students
received lessons in both robotics and biology.

"(The partnership) is important because we inspire conservation of the
Salish Sea and place-based learning fosters that inspiration," said Alison
Riley, marketing and development coordinator at the science center. "Our
goal is that every child will be ocean literate. They grow up here. It
should be a part of their life."

The cross-disciplinary work continues inside the classroom, too. A math and
engineering lesson on a hillside slope coincides with a cliff-restoration
project with the North Olympic Salmon Coalition. A social studies class
investigates how the government, activists, and the private sector interact
on environmental issues.

Even younger grades can participate. Port Townsend first- and
second-graders selected animals from the Salish Sea to study habitats.
Students visited local beaches to see where their animals lived.  Students
also like the way their work is viewed by adults in the community, said
Sarah Rubenstein, project director of Port Townsend's Maritime Discovery
Schools Initiative. Middle-schoolers told Rubenstein that they're more
likely to hear negative stereotypes about their age group. So they're
excited, she said, that clearing invasive species or building bike racks
gives adults a positive perception of them.

The district likes to use the word "stewardship" rather than "conservation"
to describe its focused curriculum, Rubenstein said. Especially as
graduates enter the workforce, schools want students to understand how
industry affects the environment.

"The difference is important because students leave seeing themselves as
responsible owners of the local community but also on a more global scale,"
Rubenstein said. "They understand how their actions have a local impact but
also a global impact."

For example, high school seniors studying how climate change affects ocean
acidification wouldn't solely focus on the local impact on shellfish but
also the impact of rising waters worldwide, Rubenstein said

And they won't be the only ones studying it. Across the continent is
Broadneck High School in Maryland. Located at sea level, surrounded by
three bodies of water—the Severn and Magothy Rivers and the Chesapeake
Bay—the school community is acutely aware of what could happen when climate
change brings rising sea water. Every school in Anne Arundel County
operates under a different theme, and Broadneck's location influenced its
decision to focus on "environmental literacy."

The school's signature program facilitator, Michelle Weisgerber, helps
teachers incorporate the theme into class lessons, though not every lesson
has to include environmental literacy. An English class studying Henry
David Thoreau might go to a nearby farm to connect Thoreau's inspiration to
his work. Or a political science class might study an article on fracking
through both the Fox News and CNN journalistic lenses and compare points of
view.

The school of 2,100 students also brings in guest speakers from local
energy suppliers, hosts environmental field trips, and has two optional
classes dedicated to intensive environmental study.

Broadneck has gained national recognition for its environmental focus. U.S.
Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Maryland) invited one of the school's students to
participate in an upcoming environmental roundtable: "Environmental
Challenges and the Impact on Maryland Communities."  "No matter what career
you do, the environment is going to have an impact on you and you're going
to have an impact on the environment," Weisgerber said.

Back in Connecticut, Common Ground's Mercer has spent four years trekking
through rivers and cleaning up hurricane-wrecked beaches. So it might seem
strange—at first glance—that she plans to become a midwife. But Mercer
understands how her high school's focus on environmental justice inspired
her career choice.

"What attracted me to the environmental work is helping frontline
communities that don't have a voice," Mercer said. "I see being a midwife
as a way of advocating for women's health." When students learn about their
local environment, they have a stake in the vitality of it, school leaders
find.

Trekking through the murky river together, they transform it.

Kate is an editorial intern at YES! Follow her on Twitter @KateStringer2.

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