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Showing posts with label EE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EE. Show all posts

July 21, 2010

Common Standards Judged Better Than Most States'

By Stephen Sawchuk

Published by Education Week, online July 21, 2010

The common academic-content standards that dozens of states are now adopting are better overall than 33 individual states’ standards, according to an analysis released today by a Washington research-and-advocacy group.

The standards meet or best the quality of every state’s current math guidelines and all but three sets of English/language-arts standards, the study finds. California and Indiana, as well as the District of Columbia, have higher-quality ELA standards than the common standards, according to the analysis.

To date, 25 states have adopted the common measures developed through the Common Core State Standards Initiative, which grew out of a state-led effort to align what students across the nation are learning.

“If they implement as well as adopt, kids in about three quarters of the states will clearly be better off than they are today,” said Checker Finn, Jr., the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, which conducted the analysis. “The United States is approaching a set of agreed-upon national standards for a core of its K-12 curriculum, and I think that’s a healthy thing for the country.”

The think tank’s analysis comes as a wave of states, including populous New York; the District of Columbia, which instituted new curricula over the past decade; and Massachusetts, famed for its highly regarded set of standards, this week consider adoption of the common academic-content standards.

Released in June, the common standards were organized and developed by two Washington-based groups representing states—the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers—with the unofficial blessing of federal education officials. In contrast to the typically slow, deliberative process for updating content standards, states have by and large been quick to sign onto the standards since they win additional points in the federal Race to the Top competition for adopting them by Aug. 2. ("States Adopt Standards at Fast Clip," July 14, 2010.)

But Massachusetts officials have experienced vigorous opposition from some constituencies about their plans to adopt. Meanwhile, education leaders in Minnesota plan to hold off on adopting the CCSSI math standards, and Virginia officials say they don’t plan to adopt either the math or the ELA standards.

Two other states, Texas and Alaska, are not participating in the CCSSI.

Judgment Calls

For the Fordham Institute analysis, teams of reviewers analyzed sets of academic-content standards, as well as supplemental materials such as curriculum frameworks, from all 50 states. They then compared these to the CCSSI standards.

The term “standards” itself has historically proven to be fungible across the states, embodying everything from general statements of purpose to highly detailed instructional guidelines. Attempts to define just what constitutes high-quality standards have yielded disagreements, not just about content but about how it should be taught. ("Resurgent Debate, Familiar Themes," Quality Counts, Jan. 14, 2010.)

Mr. Finn acknowledged that the Fordham group’s review, like any review of standards, involves judgment calls about what students should know and be able to do. Its reviewers gave more points for highly specific standards focused on content rather than metacognitive “strategies” or skills, and for standards that are clear, well organized, and easy for teachers, students, and curriculum developers to use.

In math, reviewers valued a focus on mastering basic number operations rather than on using different algorithms, for instance. And in English/language arts, they looked for lists of specific texts, samples of student writing, and differentiated guidance for teaching fiction and non-fiction genres.

The ELA review team was led by Sheila Byrd Carmichael, a founding director of the American Diploma Project, and the math review was headed by W. Stephen Wilson, a professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore. The ADP is an initiative of Achieve, a Washington-based nonprofit group that worked with the NGA and CCSSO to develop the common standards.

The reviewers graded states’ current standards on a one-to-10 scale, and compared those to ratings for the common standards, which earned a B-plus, or eight points, in ELA and an A-minus, or nine points, in math, from the institute’s reviewers.

A disparity of two points above or below the CCSSI mark garnered a state’s current standards the label of “clearly superior” or “clearly inferior” to the CCSSI. Disparities of a point or less were judged “too close to call.”

The institute judged that the CCSSI standards were roughly of the same level of rigor as the strongest math standards in the country and superior to the majority of states’ current standards.

In ELA, the Fordham group deemed the CCSSI standards better than or equivalent to 47 states’ current offerings, but weaker than the standards in California, Indiana, and the District of Columbia. Mr. Finn, however, said that the reviewers’ qualms about the CCSSI’s ELA standards were relatively minor. The group would have preferred more-specific guidance on how to teach aspects such as sub-genres of literature.

“This is not profound criticism,” he said. “It’s like saying it was a solid meal but the salad dressing wasn’t totally satisfactory.”

As for states’ own standards, the reviewers judged Alaska, Delaware, Iowa, Montana, and Nebraska as currently having the weakest ELA standards. Kansas, Montana, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Wisconsin, and Wyoming received the lowest ratings in math.

Possible Effects?

It was not immediately clear whether the analysis might affect the adoption of common standards in states in which officials have expressed concerns about their merits.

Though the CCSSI standards have support from Massachusetts’ education commissioner, Mitchell D. Chester, and its secretary of education, Paul Reville, the standards have faced strong opposition from other parties. They include state board of education member Sandra Stotsky, who earlier refused to sign off on a “validation” of the CCSSI.

The Fordham review considered the common standards to be about as strong as Massachusetts’ current, much-lauded guidelines. The Massachusetts Board of Education discussed the CCSSI standards yesterday and is scheduled to make its adoption decision today.

Meanwhile, other states that contend that their current standards and assessments are more rigorous than the CCSSI earned less-than-stellar scores on the Fordham review.

Minnesota officials don’t plan to adopt the CCSSI math standards, but the Fordham reviewers judged the state’s math standards as “clearly inferior” to the CCSSI, with a grade of B.

In a statement, Minnesota Education Commissioner Alice Seagren responded that the Fordham group’s criteria “advocates for a specificity in academic standards that generally is reserved for Minnesota school districts.”

She said that CCSSI math standards “did not meet our expectations,” but the state would review them again in the 2010-11 school year.

Virginia will not change its Standards of Learning, officials there have said. That state garnered a C grade for both its math and reading standards. A spokesman for the state did not immediately return a request for comment.

The chief of staff to Indiana Education Secretary Tony Bennett said his state's education department plans to recommend adoption of the CCSSI in August, despite the slightly higher rating for its current ELA standards.

The review shows that “there wasn’t an astronomical difference in quality,” said Todd Houston. “There’s a lot of benefit to the Common Core: the easy comparison in how states are doing, our leadership role in the assessment consortia [for developing aligned tests], and knowing that more resources and textbooks will be aligned.

“I think everyone in that top tier recognizes that this may be a bit awkward,” he added, “but not awkward enough to change our path.”

How States' Standards Compare
English Language Arts

CLEARLY SUPERIOR TO THE COMMON CORE
California A
District of Columbia A
Indiana A

TOO CLOSE TO CALL
Massachusetts | A-
Tennessee | A-
Texas | A-
Common Core | B+
Colorado | B+
Georgia | B+
Louisiana | B+
Oklahoma | B+
Virginia | B+
Alabama | B
Arizona | B
Florida | B

CLEARLY INFERIOR TO THE COMMON CORE
Hawaii | C
Idaho | C
Kansas | C
Maine | C
Maryland | C
Minnesota | C
Nevada | C
New Hampshire | C
New Jersey | C
New Mexico | C
New York | C
Ohio | C
Oregon | C
South Dakota | C
Utah | C
Washington | C
Arkansas | D
Connecticut | D
Illinois | D
Kentucky | D
Michigan | D
Mississippi | D
Missouri | D
North Carolina | D
North Dakota | D
Pennsylvania | D
Rhode Island | D
South Carolina | D
Vermont | D
West Virginia | D
Wisconsin | D
Wyoming | D
Alaska | F
Delaware | F
Iowa | F
Montana | F
Nebraska | F

Mathematics

CLEARLY SUPERIOR TO THE COMMON CORE
None

TOO CLOSE TO CALL
California | A
District of Columbia | A
Florida | A
Indiana | A
Washington | A
Common Core | A-
Georgia | A-
Michigan | A-
Utah | A-
Alabama | B+
Massachusetts | B+
Oklahoma | B+
Oregon | B+

CLEARLY INFERIOR TO THE COMMON CORE
Arizona | B
Delaware | B
Idaho | B
Minnesota | B
New York | B
West Virginia | B
Arkansas | C
Colorado | C
Hawaii | C
Iowa | C
Louisiana | C
Maine | C
Mississippi | C
Nebraska | C
Nevada | C
New Jersey | C
New Mexico | C
North Dakota | C
Ohio | C
South Carolina | C
South Dakota | C
Tennessee | C
Texas | C
Virginia | C
Alaska | D
Connecticut | D
Illinois | D
Kentucky | D
Maryland | D
Missouri | D
New Hampshire | D
North Carolina | D
Rhode Island | D
Kansas | F
Montana | F
Pennsylvania | F
Vermont | F
Wisconsin | F
Wyoming | F

SOURCE: Thomas B. Fordham Institute

Vol. 29, Issue 37

© 2010 Editorial Projects in Education

6935 Arlington Road, Bethesda MD 20814 301-280-3100 1-800-346-1834

March 18, 2010

National Education Technology Plan Feedback

The US Department of Education is inviting comments on a National Education Technology Plan. The introduction describes a model of 21st century learning that calls for using technology to help built the capacity of educators through “connected teaching.” In such a model, teams of connected educators replace solo practitioners, and classrooms are fully connected to provide educators with 24/7 access to data, analytic tools, and other resources. Of note is the call to postsecondary institutions to partner more closely with K12 and the identification of a set of “grand
challenges” for R&D, seeking integrated solutions.

For more information, check out:

http://www.ed.gov/technology/netp-2010

February 17, 2010

Environmental Literacy Included in President's New Education Budget

Last week President Obama made an historic first by including environmental literacy in the president's new education budget. The following article was posted on the No Child Left Inside Coalition's website:

Together with their legislative sponsors, the No Child Left Inside® Coalition today cheered President Obama's budget as a historic moment, noting that environmental literacy has been included in the U.S. Department of Education budget for the very first time.

"This budget takes an important step toward boosting environmental education in the classroom and giving more kids the opportunity to get out and learn about the natural world around them," said Senator Jack Reed (RI). "Environmental education can help raise student achievement in other core subjects like math and science. This is a smart investment in our children's future and the future of our planet."

"The President's budget proposal is a terrific first step for environmental education," said Congressman John Sarbanes, author of the No Child Left Inside House legislation. "I look forward to working with the Administration to more fully incorporate environmental education into school curriculums across the country."

President Obama and Secretary Duncan have made innovation and student achievement a major platform of the Obama Administration, and as a result have included environmental literacy in a new program. The proposed budget includes new funding of $1 billion for Effective Teaching and Learning for a Complete Education program designed to improve instruction to support college- and career-readiness standards, in part through the use of technology to deliver high-quality content. Among those programs eligible for funding are those deemed important to a "Well-Rounded Education," including environmental literacy.

"Advancing the environmental literacy of our students is key to addressing today's increasingly complex environmental and related economic, social, natural resource, and energy issues," said Don Baugh, Director of the No Child Left Inside® Coalition. "It will not only better prepare students for college and the 21st Century workforce, but help to combat childhood obesity and related health problems by getting kids outside to learn about the natural world. On behalf of our entire 1,500 member Coalition, I commend the President and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan for recognizing the critical role that environmental education plays in preparing our students for the green economy."

"The Department of Education took a historic step for the future economy by including environmental literacy under it's 'Well-Rounded Education' budget initiative for fiscal year 2011," said Kevin Coyle, Vice President for Education and Training at the National Wildlife Federation—a founding member of the Coalition. "Having an environmentally literate citizenry is key to increasing interest in the STEM fields and keeping America competitive in the global, clean energy economy."

Representing 50 million individuals nation-wide, the No Child Left Inside Coalition has become the nation's leading voice for environmental education, speaking for a diverse group of Americans from throughout the United States who believe young people should receive a meaningful and robust education about their natural world.

January 25, 2010

Nature Education on Sesame Street

This year marks the 40th season of Sesame Street and it sure is going to be a great year! The first episode of the season was titled My World is Green and Growing, and kicked off a two-year science initiative "to help support children's innate sense of awe, wonder, and curiosity about nature."

The 40th season focuses on "Nature Education, through the lens of scientific investigation, [where] new songs, story-lines, and animations are designed to stimulate a child's knowledge and appreciation for the natural environments around them....Each episode will feature nature curriculum in one or more components of the show."

The three main goals of Sesame Street’s environmental focus are to "increase positive attitudes towards nature, deepen children’s knowledge about the natural world, and encourage behavior that shows respect and care for the environment. Through these overarching goals, children learn to actively explore and discover the world around them as they become true scientific thinkers and investigators."

Nature Education on Sesame Street? Sounds good to me! And this is also very exciting timing wise, as both Project Learning Tree and Project WILD have just released their Early Childhood Development curriculum guides. USEE is eagerly awaiting our new PLT guides to arrive any day now and will be starting workshops soon!

As part of the Nature Education Curriculum that Sesame Street is incorporating, Jason Mraz appeared as a guest on the show, rewriting the lyrics to his popular song "I'm Yours" to create a new song called "Outdoors." It's kind of catchy, if you ask me. Enjoy!

(sorry about the goofy formatting - this is the smallest size I could find to embed.)

January 14, 2010

Take Action for EE

(the information below comes from the National Project Learning Tree Organizatoin)

Happy New Year! We need your help in our continuing fight for legislation that supports environmental education, including programs like yours!
The U.S. Department of Education is putting together a new version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (aka the No Child Left Behind Act), a massive education bill. We need your help to ensure that the bill includes provisions for environmental and outdoor education, like the No Child Left Inside Act (NCLI). NCLI, introduced in Congress last year, provides critical support for environmental education programs like Project Learning Tree®.
Please take action now and send an email to the Department of Education, letting Secretary Duncan and the Obama Administration know that you support the inclusion of NCLI in the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
This exciting and rare opportunity to gain the support of the Department of Education and the Obama Administration may not come again. Please join us in calling for the inclusion of NCLI in the reauthorized Elementary and Secondary Education Act today.
By clicking "take action" you'll be directed to a template email that you can edit. Please take a minute to include some personal elements about your experiences with environmental education. When you click "send" it will automatically be delivered to the Department of Education.
Thank you for taking action in support of environmental education!

Click here to visit the PLT site and send your email!

January 8, 2010

2010 Green Bag Series Feedback

Help USEE improve and strengthen the Green Bag Professional Development Series by taking this quick survey! We are looking for feedback and ideas for our 2010 Green Bag Professional Development Series. Please take a moment to respond to this extremely quick survey (less than 5 minutes). Click the link below to provide your input for the 2010 line-up!

2010 Green Bag Professional Development Series Survey

What is the USEE Green Bag Professional Development Series?

The USEE Green Bag Series is part of the Utah Environmental Education Certification Program. The Utah EE Certification Program is part of a national initiative to establish guidelines and standards for the professional practice of environmental educators and to further professionalize the field of EE. For this national initiative, USEE has developed a state level, competency-based certification program for environmental educators. This program, now in its eighth year, has served to pull the environmental education community in Utah together and to whet their appetite for professional development opportunities.

USEE’s Green Bag Professional Development series serves these non-formal environmental educators by offering presentations and discussions that provide guidance for certification applicants and other interested individuals. Anyone is welcome to attend the Green Bag Professional Development series. For more information, call Nicole at 801-328-1549 or email nicole@usee.org.

Thank you for your support!

November 13, 2009

LAST DAY to Register for the USEE Conference

Registration Deadline for the 20th Annual Utah Environmental Education Conference is this TODAY, November 13!


Are you an interested citizen, non-formal environmental educator, K-12 teacher, curriculum developer, conservation educator, or a student, staff, or faculty member of a university or college? Then join us for the 20th Annual Utah EE Conference!

This year's conference is packed with awesome concurrent sessions, fabulous guest and keynote speakers, a book signing with Robert Michael Pyle, sensational field trips, excellent networking opportunities, bird watching sessions, Chi Gong in the mornings led by Jason, and it all kicks of with a fun and educational feature film and panel discussion; The American Southwest: Are We Running Dry?


Don't miss out on USEE's biggest event of the the year!


November 10, 2009

Only a Few Days Left to Register for the USEE Conference!

Registration Deadline for the 20th Annual Utah Environmental Education Conference is this Friday, November 13!


Are you an interested citizen, non-formal environmental educator, K-12 teacher, curriculum developer, conservation educator, or a student, staff, or faculty member of a university or college? Then join us for the 20th Annual Utah EE Conference!

This year's conference is packed with awesome concurrent sessions, fabulous guest and keynote speakers, a book signing with Robert Michael Pyle, sensational field trips, excellent networking opportunities, bird watching sessions, Chi Gong in the mornings led by Jason, and it all kicks of with a fun and educational feature film and panel discussion; The American Southwest: Are We Running Dry?


Don't miss out on USEE's biggest event of the the year!


October 28, 2009

2009 Utah EE Conference Happenings

-by Danny Trujillo

Whats up everyone!

We have lots of cool things coming up here at USEE. The biggest one (or at least the biggest thing everyone here has been working on) is the up-coming conference that is taking place during the third week of November. We have some way awesome presenters that will be speaking this year about all things environmental education. Some of the ones topic that I am personally looking forward to are:
  • Energy: The BIG Picture;
  • Connecting Early Childhood Development and Nature; and
  • Learning to speak the same language.
Some other really exciting presentations that will have some good information are:
  • Field Trip at the Hogle Zoo;
  • School Yard Explorers;
  • Designing Games for Learning;
  • Sowing Seeds for a New Future: Garden Education Program at the Salt Lake County Jail.
In addition to some of these presentations we will also have a free movie that will be open to the public about water issues and how the West might not have enough water for our communities. I personally have seen the film in one of my classes at the University of Utah and it makes you really think about water in a whole new way.

These are just a few of the topics that will be covered this year. Also, the key note speaker this year is Robert Michael Pyle who has written many excellent books about the environment. He is also an independent biologist and holds many other accomplishments in the environmental filed.

I hope to see you all there; it's going to be fun! For more information about this or any other up-coming events please visit our website at www.usee.org or visit our Conference Information page.

October 20, 2009

Only a Few More Days to Save for the Conference!



Only a Few More Days Until the Early-Bird Deadline!


20th Annual Utah Enviornmental Education Conference
Thursday, November 19 (evening opener) through Saturday, November 21, 2009

At the Wasatch Retreat and Conference Center
75 South 200 East, Downtown SLC



Early-Bird Registration ends
this Friday, October 23.


Register Now!



Please Note: As you may have noticed, we are NOT sending out hard-copies of the Registration Packet. In order to reduce our footprint and to save a little money on postage, we are doing registration online.
For questions,
please contact Nicole Thomas at nicole@usee.org.

Keynote Speakers

Robert Michael Pyle

Robert Michael Pyle has a Master's Degree in Nature Interpretation, which was followed by a doctorate in Ecology and Environmental Studies from Yale University. In 1971he founded the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, and later chaired its Monarch Project. The Society for Conservation Biology awarded Pyle a Distinguished Service Award in 1993. For many years he has been a full-time writer and independent biologist and teacher. His fifteen books include Wintergreen (winner of the John Burroughs Medal for distinguished nature writing), The Thunder Tree, Where Bigfoot Walks, Chasing Monarchs, and Walking the High Ridge, as well as The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Butterflies, The Butterflies of Cascadia, and several other standard butterfly works. His most recent book, Sky Time in Gray's River: Living for Keeps in a Forgotten Place, won the 2007 National Outdoor Book Award for natural history literature and was a finalist for the Orion and Washington Book Awards. He lives along a tributary of the Lower Columbia River in southwest Washington with his wife, Thea Linnaea Pyle, a weaver and botanist.

Tim Brown

Tim Brown, a native of Salt Lake, is the Executive Director for Tracy Aviary. Tim’s interest in EE began in college when he participated in outreach programs and, in 1993, he completed an internship at USEE. Over the next few years, he worked his way up the ladder to become the Executive Director of USEE in 1996. In 2002, Tim became the director of the new non-profit Center for Green Space Design and in 2005, Tim jumped at the opportunity to be the Executive Director of Tracy Aviary. Tim has also served on many local boards including Friends of Great Salt Lake (current), Four Corners School of Outdoor Education, and HawkWatch International. Tim has degrees from the University of Vermont and Antioch-University – Seattle, and lives in Salt Lake with his wife and two children.

Concurrent Sessions

The conference will also be featuring an Opening Event on Thursday, November 19. (To Be Determined) We have many exciting conference sessions, including regional presentations and some very fun feild trips. Some of this year's concurrent session line up are:
  • Designing Games for Learning
  • Sowing the Seeds for a New Future: Garden Education Program at the Salt Lake County Jail
  • How Partnerships between Colleges and EE Programs Can Provide Great Opportunites
  • Home on the Range with GoogleEarth: The Impacts of Grazing Over Generations
  • Assessment and Evaluation 101: How to Get Started
Field Trips

We also have some awesome field trips lined up:
  • Repertory Dance Theater's Green Map Project
  • The Nature Conservancy's Shoreland Preserve Tour
  • The Hogle Zoo
  • and of course, there will be the usual Guidelines Training during this time as well.
Teacher Day

This year's conference also is featuring a "Teacher Day" which will take place on Saturday from 8:00 am to 3:30 pm. There are at least 2 or more sessions directly related to teachers going on all day. Some exapmples of sessions include:
  • School Yard Explorers
  • Measuring CO2
  • PLT Forests of the World Training
  • Environmental Education for Grades 3-5
  • Energy - The BIG and Basic Picture

September 30, 2009

Utah EE Award Nominations

2009 Call for EE Award Nominations
Deadline: Friday, October 23, 2009

It is time once again to think about those who have made significant contributions to Utah’s environmental education (EE) community. Nominations for Environmental Educator, Environmental Education Program, Environmental Education Business, and Environmental Education Volunteer of the Year Awards are now being accepted. Recipients will be officially recognized at USEE’s 20th Annual USEE Conference.

To submit a nomination, please read through the following information/criteria and fill out the Awards Nomination Form
. We encourage you to even nominate your own EE program, business, or yourself for any of these awards. USEE members and attendees of the 20th Annual USEE Conference will vote for the recipients of these awards online.

CLICK HERE TO NOMINATE AN EE LEADER IN YOUR COMMUNITY TODAY!

Vern A. Fridley Environmental Educator of the Year Award
Awarded to an individual who has made a major contribution to environmental education in Utah. Nominee does not need to be a teacher, but must be involved in education about the environment and human responsibility to it. Review committee will consider the following criteria:

    • What does the nominee do?
    • What audience(s) does he/she work with?
    • In what ways does this person serve as a model environmental educator?
    • What important contribution(s) has he/she made to the field of EE or to improving environmental quality in Utah?

Utah Environmental Education Program of the Year Award
Awarded to a program that has made an impact in education about one or more aspects of the environment. This may include understanding, stewardship and/or management. Review committee will consider the following criteria:

    • What is the mission or goal of the program and how does it incorporate environmental education?
    • What is the scope of program (local, regional, statewide) and what audience(s) does it target?
    • How does the program model quality and effective environmental education?
    • What important contribution(s) has the program made to the field of EE or to improving environmental quality in Utah?

Utah Environmental Education Volunteer of the Year Award
Awarded to an individual who has made a significant contribution to environmental education specifically through volunteer (unpaid) service to an environmental organization in our state. Work may include but is not necessarily limited to teaching, group facilitation, field leadership, program development, administration, writing, speaking, presentations, or fundraising. Review committee will consider the following criteria:

    • A brief description of how the nominee’s work has benefited teaching or learning about the functions, processes, sustainability, or cultural interactions pertaining to our natural local or state environments.

USEE Business of the Year
Awarded to a for-profit organization that has made a major contribution to environmental education in Utah. This contribution may include but is not necessarily limited to directly educating the public, support for other EE initiatives, in-kind assistance, employee efforts and increasing environmental awareness to the broad community.

    • What does the nominee do?
    • What audience(s) do they work with?
    • In what ways does this business as a model for environmental education efforts?
    • What important contribution(s) have they made to the field of EE or to improving environmental quality in Utah?

Also, don't forget that Conference Registration is NOW OPEN! Early bird deadline is October 23, 2009. Register today!

September 24, 2009

Celebrate Take a Child Outside Week

Take a Child Outside Week runs from today, September 24, to next Wednesday, September 30. Take a Child Outside Weed is a program designed to help break down obstacles that keep children from discovering the natural world. By arming parents, teachers and other caregivers with resources for outdoor activities, their goal is to help children across the country develop a better understanding and appreciation of the environment in which they live, and a burgeoning enthusiasm for its exploration.

To learn more about this event, please visit: www.takeachildoutside.org. There you can get ideas for outdoor activities, pledge to take a kid outdoors, and find participating organizations. USEE is one of them, and so is Wasatch Community Gardens, one of our Institutional Members. Be a part of this national movement!

August 25, 2009

NAAEE Conference

The North American Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE) is having their annual conference in Portland, OR, from October 6 to October 11. Jason and I will be attending the conference this year and I am particularly excited as this is my first NAAEE conference as well as my first time to Oregon!

The theme for NAAEE's 2009 conference is The Power of Partnerships: Creative Leadership in Environmental Education. Jason and I are presenting during one of the sessions the results from and the next steps of the Utah Project for Excellence in Environmental Education that we recently completed in May. Please join us, we'd love to see you there!

August 20, 2009

USEE BASH! - You're Invited!


You are invited to the 13th Annual USEE Benefit BASH!
A fun-filled evening with food, drinks, music, socializing, and silent and live auction items!

DATE:
September 18, 2009, 6pm - 10pm

LOCATION:
The Wasatch Retreat and Conference Center
75 South 200 East, Salt Lake City

TICKET PRICES:
$40 for USEE members
$55 for non-members
$400 for a table of 8

Purchase tickets online today, or for more information, please call (801)328-1549.

August 17, 2009

USEE Annual Conference: Call for Proposals

Environmental Education in the West: Past, Present, & Future Conference Dates: November 19-21, 2009 Location: The Wasatch Retreat and Conference Center in Salt Lake City
Submission Deadline: September 11, 2009
Would you like to be a presenter at, or lead a field trip for, the Utah Environmental Education Conference? This year we are proud to announce that we will be including surrounding States, making this a REGIONAL Conference. This is a great opportunity to share your work and learn from others in the West.

Click here to download the proposal submission packet.

CONFERENCE STRANDS

• Environmental Literacy
• Foundations of EE
• Professional Responsibilities
• Planning and Implementing EE
• Assessment and Evaluation

Please call 801-328-1549 if you have any questions, or visit us on the web at www.usee.org. Check back frequently as we update the conference information.

August 10, 2009

How do you fight Nature Deficit?

I've been following Nicholas Kristof's series of opinion pieces on nature deficit disorder at the New York Times.

His first article addresses the general problem of Nature Deficit Disorder in children. We've discussed this issue before on the blog but I do wonder if one of our great failings in the environmental education movement has been an inability to articulate the 'why' aspect of preservation.

One problem may be that the American environmental movement has focused so much on preserving nature that it has neglected to do enough to preserve a constituency for nature. It’s important not only to save forests, but also to promote camping, hiking, bouldering and white-water rafting so that people care about saving those forests.

His second article takes a deeper look at what we as adults can do to 'recharge' our soul through experiences with nature. To Mr. Kristof, this involves backpacking and he gives a 10 point how-to guide:

1. Follow Robert Frost and take the path less traveled by, for that makes all the difference. In the evening, camp where no one else is around. You don’t need a campground: just stop anywhere that is flat. Indeed, the ground in the woods and fields is much softer than the packed dirt of campgrounds. But when you leave in the morning, make sure that you leave no trace.


Backpacking is also my favorite outdoor activity; I just spent a week rafting the Green River and certainly have that 'soul' recharging feeling he is referring to. What types of outdoor activities do you participate in for a nature recharge?

July 15, 2009

USEE Visits the Great Salt Lake Institute

Photo: Issac Hall sampling from a paddle board in the GSL

By: T.J. Adamson (USEE Intern)

Do the brine shrimp really look like Sea Monkeys? How does the Great Salt Lake harness sunlight? How much salt is really in the Great Salt Lake?

Once a month, the USEE staff has been visiting various organizations around the community that are involved with environmental education. The goal is to keep in touch with our connections, learn more about their operations, tour their facility, and discuss ways that we can help each other out. For this month’s field trip we checked out the Great Salt Lake Institute (GSLI). Andree, Nicole, Alaina and I meet with the coordinator Jaimi Butler. Jaimi received a college degree studying brine shrimp and birds. After working at the brine shrimp factory, she now in charge of operating the GSLI and is involved with many projects. We sat down with her as she told us all about their work and what they are doing.

The Great Salt Lake Institute, not to be confused with Friends of Great Salt Lake, is fairly new and located in the heart of Westminster College. They are funded by a verity of grants and receive much of their support form the college. GSLI’s mission is to be dedicated to education, research, and stewardship of the unique ecology and history of the Great Salt Lake. They are not an advocacy group, rather an educational institution that furthers research and creates public awareness. Their goal is to provide a better understanding of the GSL and its relationship to ecology and the environment. GSLI seeks partnerships with public and private groups such as colleges, universities, industry, government agencies, and non-profit organizations to engage in collaborative research efforts.

The GSLI is also working to promote science and environmental education of K-12 students by encouraging student and teacher involvement. They provide lesson plans and project opportunities to educators and link many of the research activities to current curriculum. This is a great resource for any teacher or non-formal educator. Their website offers a wonderful database of free lesson plans, activities, and projects that are open to anyone interested in teaching or learning about the Great Salt Lake. Their website provides a wide selection of lesson plans that are included in following categories: “Land Form Lessons”, “Lake Effect Lessons”, “Brine Shrimp Lessons”, “Salinity Lessons”, “Sand Lessons”, “Lake Lessons”, “Water Lessons”, “Salt Lessons”, “Ecosystem Lessons”, “Tributaries of the Great Salt Lake”, and “Seasons Lessons”. As a free resource, I would defiantly check it out. Visit www.GreatSaltLakeInstitue.org and click on the Outreach tab, then the gsl lesson plans tab.

Students of Westminster College also play an active roll. GSLI provides many opportunities for undergraduate research and scholarships in working with the GSLI. The director of the GSLI Bonnie Baxter, PhD, and Associate Director Brian Avery, PhD are both professors at the college that teach in the science and biology departments. Throughout the years, they have focused much of their research towards studying the Great Salt Lake. Currently, they teach and mentor undergraduate students interested in biological science and ecosystems.

Currently, Jaimi is putting the final arraignments together for the “Camp Great Salt Lake” summer camp. This three day camp is designed to give high school students a “true” college experience. Participants stay in the dorms and spend a few days as scientists. On the first day, students travel to the lake and take a tour on paddle boats that are fully equipped with of research equipment. They collect samples and learn about the many functions of the lake. Day two is spent in a lab at Westminster where they conduct basic experiments with their findings. On the final day they revisit the lake to see and apply what they have learned. The summer camp is open to high school students that are at least fifteen years of age and five teachers. It runs from July 12th through the 14th and cost students $150 and the teachers are paid. Scholarships are available for the students that attend. To apply, visit their website at www.GreatSaltLakeInstitue.org or contact Jaimi at jbutler@westministercollege.edu.

We learned a lot about the Great Salt Lake Institute. If you are interested in participating in or contributing to their studies, they have a free membership directory available online. You can also keep informed by becoming a fan on their Facebook page. For more information or follow their contact information provided below or visit their website where you will find a wealth of information, resources, a blog, and upcoming events.

The Great Salt Lake Institute
1840 South 1300 East
Salt Lake City, UT 84105
www.GreatSaltLakeInstitue.org

Coordinator: Jaimi Butler
jbutler@westministercollege.edu.
Director: Bonnie Baxter, PhD
bbaxter@westminstercollege.edu
Associate Director: Brian Avery, PhD
bavery@westminstercollege.edu

July 8, 2009

I just finished reading Michael Chabon's essay, Manhood for Amateurs: The Wilderness of Childhood at the New York Review of Books. In the essay he dips into some of the issues related to Nature Deficit Disorder and explores the idea that childhood has historically been a branch of cartography focusing on unstructured play and imagination. As children we roamed the streets and woodlots mapping our own neighborhoods free from adult supervision. However all of that seems to be changing:

"We schedule their encounters for them, driving them to and from one another's houses so they never get a chance to discover the unexplored lands between. If they are lucky, we send them out to play in the backyard, where they can be safely fenced in and even, in extreme cases, monitored with security cameras."

What happens when children no longer have the freedom to explore without adult supervision?

"The sandlots and creek beds, the alleys and woodlands have been abandoned in favor of a system of reservations—Chuck E. Cheese, the Jungle, the Discovery Zone: jolly internment centers mapped and planned by adults with no blank spots aside from doors marked staff only. When children roller-skate or ride their bikes, they go forth armored as for battle, and their parents typically stand nearby."



June 22, 2009

All in a Day's Work (or so...)

I have been spending the last couple of weeks revamping USEE's Utah Project for Excellence in Environmental Education web page. I'm happy to say that instead of a webpage, USEE now hosts an entire section dedicated to the project. All of the reports, documents, and presentations are up!

I just finished putting the final touches and posted it all this afternoon. Please have a look and let us know what you think:

Utah Project for Excellence in Environmental Education

We are still in the process of compiling the final report and the executive summary for the Utah Project for Excellence in Environmental Education. Until then, we hope that you can find the information (and there's a lot of it) that is already posted.

June 5, 2009

Obama Declares Great Outdoors Month, June 2009


President Obama declared June 2009 to be the Great Outdoors Month. While talking about the many outdoor opportunities the United States offers from rural and urban settings to state and national parks in his press release, the President spoke of the health benefits these settings offer. He also stated:

"My Administration is working to connect America's youth with our treasured landscapes, which should be viewed as classrooms for environmental education and gateways to careers in natural resources. These efforts will include outreach to those who typically lack representation in, and exposure to, these fields."

To achieve this goal, the President also announced:

"The Department of the Interior is launching a summer mentoring initiative as part of this effort. This program invites families and friends to teach children about the joys and wonders of the outdoors. My Administration is also increasing the number of youth involved in national service on public lands. Through AmeriCorps and other programs and partnerships, we can continue our Nation's proud tradition of service and respect for the environment."

It's an exciting time for Environmental Education indeed! According to the American Recreation Coalition, "Presidential recognition of Great Outdoors Week was begun in 1997 by then-President Clinton and has continued ever since. Since 2004, Presidential proclamation of Great Outdoors Month has come annually, celebrating a variety of important events and actions that occur during the month. Great Outdoors Month highlights the benefits of active fun outdoors and our magnificent shared resources of forests, parks, refuges, and other public lands and waters. Media attention to the proclamation triggers actions by millions of households and prompts public discussion of important issues linked to outdoor recreation, including volunteerism, health, and outdoor ethics."

In addition to the Presidential declarations, many state governors have also issued declarations for Great Outdoors Month. Governor Huntsman was one of these state governors and deemed June 2009 to be the Utah Great Outdoors Month.

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