Clear Lake, TexasStudents, staff & corporate partners around Univ. of Houston Clear Lakewill participate in the single largest organized environmental education event in U.S. history, April 14 & 15 from 8:30 - Noon,when they help plant our Watersmart School Habitat Demonstration Lab, which is being constructed in front of the NOA (North Office Annex) building at UHCL.
The local event is part of National Environmental Education Week, now in its second year of fostering a new generation of nature-lovers during a weeklong lead-up to Earth Day. The weeklong event, sponsored by Canon U.S.A., Inc., and the National Environmental Education & Training Foundation (NEETF) is expected to involve over 100,000 teachers and nature educators and over 3 million students, at 50,000 schools and 400 universities as well as zoos, aquariums and nature centers.
The public is saying more than ever that they want environmental education to be part of Americans upbringing, and this month there will be a phenomenal number of opportunities for people across the country to learn more about nature and get involved themselves, says Diane Wood, NEETF president.
Environmental education has so many benefits, Wood added, that its unfortunate that its increasingly under funded, and squeezed from so many classrooms. There hasn't been a time since the original Earth Day in 1970 when we needed the added push of National Environmental Education Week so much for our schoolchildren.
A Roper poll found that 95 percent of Americans support environmental education in school because of clear benefits seen for their children and neighborhoods. Academic studies have found that using nature as a classroom can improve test scores and self-esteem. It fosters a sense of community and responsibility, and lessons aboutsystems thinking and the value of cooperation that stay with students a lifetime. For details, see www.EEWeek.org.
In honor of National Environmental Education Week, EIH @UHCL is offering the following nature activities:
Bring your favorite garden tool and gloves what better way to celebrate Earth
Day than by helping plant our demonstration lab.
For more information about the local events and sponsors, see www.eih.uh.edu.
Canon U.S.A., Inc., has made National Environmental Education Week possible with a major donation and for the second year is sponsoring a photo contest for participants. For instructions on how to enter, seewww.EEWeek.org. For last years winners, see http://www.plt.org/PhotoContest/winners.html.
National organizers said theyre doing their part to overcome what author Richard Louv called American childrens nature deficit disorder, in his best-selling book, Last Child in the Woods(newly out in paperback from Algonquin Books, in March 2006).
Unlike childrens technological fascinations, Louv writes, Nature does not steal time; it amplifies it. Getting acquainted with nature inspires creativity, offers healing for children living in destructive families and neighborhoods, and connects each child with an older, larger world, Louv says.And nature needs its children: Where else will its future stewards come from?
Louv is joining hundreds of local and national partners in endorsing this years National EE Week activities to promote students health, their interest in school, and their environmental literacy.