EXCELLENCE IN
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
GUIDELINES FOR LEARNING
(PRE K-12)
          North American Association
          for Environmental Education

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THE NATIONAL PROJECT
FOR EXCELLENCE
IN ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
                        Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for
                        Learning (Pre K-12) is part of a continuing series of
                        documents published by the North American Association for
                        Environmental Education (NAAEE) as part of the National
                        Project for Excellence in Environmental Education. The
                        Project is committed to synthesizing the best thinking about
                        environmental education through an extensive process of
                        review and discussion. Thus far, thousands of individuals and
                        organizations representing all aspects of education and
                        environmental education have reviewed working outlines and
                        drafts. Reviewers include teachers, educational
                        administrators, environmental scientists, curriculum
                        developers, and natural resource agency and education
                        department staff.
                          Acknowledgments
                          Special thanks to the thousands of teachers, curriculum
                          developers, educational administrators, environmental
                          education specialists, and environmental scientists who
                          have reviewed drafts of this document, and to Carol
                          Adkins, Bob Carter, Jane Eller, Joe Heimlich, John
                          Lancos, Colleen Murakami, Al Stenstrup, Susan Toth,
                          Sally Wall, and Sarah Wilcox for kindly providing input
                          into the 2004 revision of the National Project for
                          Excellence in Environmental Education publications.
II

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Members of the Guidelines Writing Team

      Bora Simmons, Chair
             Department of Teaching and Learning
             Northern Illinois University
             DeKalb, Illinois

      Michele Archie, Writer
             The Harbinger Institute
             Kapa'au, Hawaii

      Lori Mann, Copy Editor, Design and Layout
             Environmental Education Consultant
             Burlingame, California

      Mary Vymetal-Taylor, Project Assistant
             Northern Illinois University
             DeKalb, Illinois

      Alan Berkowitz
             Ecological Society of America
             Washington, D.C.

      Terry Bedell
             The Clorox Company
             Oakland, California

      Judy Braus
             World Wildlife Fund - U.S.
             Washington, D.C.

      Glenda Holmes
             Washington, D.C. School District
             Washington, D.C.

      Mary Paden
             GreenCom, Academy for Educational
                Development
             Washington, D.C.

      Robert Raze
             Office of Environmental Education
             Florida Gulf Coast University
             Tallahassee, Florida

      Talbert Spence
             Cranbrook Institute of Science
             Bloomfield Hills, Michigan

      Brenda Weiser
             Environmental Institute of Houston
             University of Houston - Clear Lake
             Houston, Texas
                    '                                                           •••
                                                                               III

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                              This publication was funded by the United States
                              Environmental Protection Agency under agreement number
                              EPA-NT902897-01-1 to the North American Association for
                              Environmental Education.
                                 The contents of this document do not necessarily reflect
                              the views and policies of the United States Environmental
                              Protection Agency or the North American Association for
                              Environmental Education, nor does mention of trade names or
                              commercial products constitute endorsement or
                              recommendation for use.
                                 Additional funding and support for this project has been
                              received from the  Environmental Education and Training
                              Partnership (EETAP), Northern Illinois University, and the
                              National Environmental Education and  Training Foundation.
                                 Additional copies of this book can be obtained by
                              contacting:
                                 NAAEE Publications and Membership Office
                                 2000 P. Street, NW—Suite 540
                                 Washington, DC 20036 USA
                                 (202) 419-0412 (phone)
                                 (202) 419-0415 (fax)
                                 Web site: www.naaee.org, • www.eelink.net

                                 ISBN #1-884008-75-5
                              Copyright © 1999, 2000, 2004 by the North American
                              Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE).
                              Commercial reproduction of any material in this publication is
                              strictly prohibited without written permission from the
                              publisher, NAAEE. Educators may photocopy up to 100
                              copies of these materials for non-commercial educational
                              purposes.
                                                             printed on recycled paper
IV

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
                  Introduction	1
                  Environmental Education: A Vision for the Future	1
                  Essential Underpinnings of Environmental Education... 2
                  Teaching from the Guidelines	4
                  How the Guidelines are Organized	5
                  The Guidelines at a Glance	7

                  Guidelines for Fourth Grade	11


                  Guidelines for Eighth Grade	29


                  Guidelines for Twelfth Grade	49


                  Appendices:
                  A: Executive Summary	71
                  B: Background for the	88
                    Development of the
                    Learner Guidelines Framework

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INTRODUCTION
                      Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for Learning
                      (Pre K-12) provides students, parents, educators, home schoolers,
                      administrators, policy makers, and the public a set of common,
                      voluntary guidelines for environmental education. The guidelines
                      support state and local environmental education efforts by:
                         •  Setting expectations for performance and achievement
                            in fourth, eighth, and twelfth grades;
                         •  Suggesting a framework for effective and comprehensive
                            environmental education programs and curricula;
                         •  Demonstrating how environmental education can be
                            used to meet standards set by the traditional disciplines
                            and to give students opportunities to synthesize knowledge
                            and experience across disciplines; and
                         •  Defining the aims of environmental education.
                         These guidelines set a standard for high-quality environmental
                      education across the country, based on what an environmentally
                      literate person should know and be able to do. They draw on the best
                      thinking in the field to outline the core ingredients for environmental
                      education.


                      Environmental Education:

                      A Vision for the Future
                      Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for Learning
                      is grounded in a widely shared understanding of effective
                      environmental education. For many educators, that understanding
                      begins with two founding documents of the field: the Belgrade
                      Charter (UNESCO-UNEP, 1976) and the Tbilisi Declaration
                      (UNESCO, 1978).
                         The Belgrade Charter was adopted by a United Nations
                      conference and provides a widely accepted goal statement for
                      environmental education:
                            The goal of environmental education is to develop a
                            world population that is aware of, and concerned
                            about, the environment and its associated problems,
                            and which has the knowledge, skills, attitudes,
                            motivations, and commitment to work individually
                            and collectively toward solutions of current problems
                            and the prevention of new ones.
                         A few years later, the world's first intergovernmental conference
                      on environmental education adopted the Tbilisi Declaration. This

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declaration built on the Belgrade Charter and established three
broad goals for environmental education. These goals provide
the foundation for much of what has been done in the field
since 1978:
   •  To foster clear awareness of, and concern about,
       economic, social, political and ecological
       interdependence in urban and rural areas;
   •  To provide every person with opportunities to acquire
       the knowledge, values, attitudes, commitment and
       skills needed to protect and improve the environment;
   •  To create new patterns of behavior of individuals,
       groups and society as a whole towards the
       environment.
   As the field has evolved, these principles have been
researched, critiqued, revisited, and expanded. They still stand
as a strong foundation for a shared view of the core concepts
and skills that environmentally literate citizens need. Since
1978, bodies such as the Brundtland Commission
(Brundtland, 1987), the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development in Rio (UNCED, 1992), the
Thessaloniki Declaration (UNESCO, 1997) and the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg (United
Nations, 2002) have influenced the work of many educators,
highlighting the importance of viewing the environment
within the context of human influences. This perspective has
expanded the emphasis of environmental education, focusing
more attention on social equity, economics, culture, and
political structure.
   Environmental education is rooted in the belief that
humans can live compatibly with nature and act equitably
toward each other. Another fundamental belief is that people
can make informed decisions that consider future generations.
Environmental education aims for a democratic society in
which effective, environmentally literate citizens participate
with creativity and responsibility.
Essential Underpinnings
of Environmental Education
Environmental education builds from a core of key principles
that inform its approach to education. Some of these
important underpinnings are:
    Systems: Systems help make sense of a large and
complex world. A system is made up of parts. Each part can
be understood separately. The whole, however, is understood

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   The Need for Environmental Literacy
   The ultimate goal of environmental education is the development of an environ-
   mentally literate citizenry. Environmental literacy is not, however, a goal that is
   reached easily.  We are asking individuals to go beyond the fact by fact, piece by
   piece examination of our environment and begin to understand and think in terms
   of systems bound together.  We are asking individuals to develop a sophisticated
   set of skills that allow them to solve novel environmental problems and determine
   the best set of actions. We are asking individuals to become thoughtful, skillful,
   and active citizens in a democracy.
       We need an environmentally literate citizenry that is not only capable of taking
   individual action, but of making well-informed public policy decisions collectively.
   Increasingly, individuals are asked to make choices on complex issues that affect
   their own lives, the lives of their families, their communities, and the world beyond
   their shores. Choices are made every time people enter a store, rum on a water fau-
   cet, plant a butterfly garden, or set the thermostat in their homes. Each time citizens
   vote, they make environmental decisions. When public policy is made, these deci-
   sions not only impact the economy and jobs, but the environment. Environmental
   literacy is predicated on the belief that if we educate our citizens so they are capa-
   ble of making quality decisions, they will do so when the time comes.
only by understanding the relationships and interactions
among the parts. The human body can be understood as a
system; so can galaxies. Organizations, individual cells,
communities of animals and plants, and families can all be
understood as systems. And systems can be nested within
other systems.
   Interdependence: Human well being is inextricably
bound with environmental quality. Humans are a part of the
natural order. We and the systems we create—our societies,
political systems, economies, religions, cultures, technolo-
gies—impact the total  environment. Since we are a part of
nature rather than outside it, we are challenged to recognize
the ramifications of our interdependence.
   The importance of where one lives: Beginning close to
home, learners forge connections with, explore, and
understand their immediate surroundings. The sensitivity,
knowledge, and skills needed for this local connection
provides a base for moving out into larger systems, broader
issues, and an expanding understanding of causes,
connections, and consequences.
   Integration and infusion: Disciplines from the natural
sciences to the social sciences to the humanities are connected
through the medium of the environment and environmental

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                            issues. Environmental education offers opportunities for
                            integration and works best when infused across the
                            curriculum, rather than being treated as a separate discipline
                            or subject area.
                               Roots in the real world: Learners develop knowledge
                            and skills through direct experience with the environment,
                            environmental issues, and society. Investigation, analysis, and
                            problem solving are essential activities and are most effective
                            when relevant to the real world.
                               Lifelong learning: Critical and creative thinking, decision
                            making, and communication, as well as collaborative
                            learning, are emphasized. These skills are essential for active
                            and meaningful learning, both in school and over a lifetime.
The Importance of Thinking Skills
Environmentally literate citizens are constantly challenged to use and improve their criti-
cal and creative thinking skills. Creative thinking is defined as thinking which results in
connections or possibilities previously unrecognized or unknown to the learner.  Critical
thinking requires an analysis or consideration based on careful examination of informa-
tion or evidence. Critical thinking relies on thoughtful questioning and logical thinking
skills such as inductive and deductive reasoning.
                           Teaching from the Guidelines
                           Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for
                           Learning (Pre K-12) is primarily focused on learner achieve-
                           ment. The instructional strategies necessary for implementing
                           environmental education are taken up in more detail in three
                           other documents in this series, Environmental Education
                           Materials:  Guidelines for Excellence (2004), the Guidelines
                           for the Preparation and Professional Development of
                           Environmental Educators (2004), and Nonformal
                           Environmental Education Programs: Guidelines for
                           Excellence (2004).
                               Learning and instruction are closely linked, however, so
                           these environmental education guidelines for learning include
                           examples that offer specific ideas for implementation in
                           instructional settings. These examples are based on several
                           general principles that help guide environmental education
                           instruction:
                               The learner is an active participant. If learning is to
                           become a natural, valued part of life beyond school,
                           instruction should be guided by the learner's interests and

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treated as a process of building knowledge and skills.
Using the guidelines and knowledge of individual learners
and different classes, instructors can make environmental
education relevant to specific learners at particular
developmental levels.
   Instruction provides opportunities for learners to enhance
their capacity for independent thinking and effective,
responsible action. Engaging in individual and group work
helps learners develop these capacities independently and in
collaborative situations that anticipate the ways in which
problem-solving happens in the community, on the job, and in
the family. A strong emphasis on developing
communication skills means that learners will be able to both
demonstrate and apply their knowledge.
   Because environmental issues can prompt deep feelings
and strong opinions, educators must take a balanced
approach to instruction. Educators incorporate differing
perspectives and points of view even-handedly and
respectfully, and present information fairly and accurately.
   Environmental literacy depends on a personal
commitment to apply skills and knowledge to help ensure
environmental quality and quality of life. For most learners,
personal commitment begins with an awareness of what
immediately surrounds them. Instructors foster learners'
innate curiosity and enthusiasm, providing them with early
and continuing opportunities to explore their
environment.  "Taking the show on the road"—or at least out
of the classroom—is an important instructional strategy for
engaging students in direct discovery of the world around
them.
How the Guidelines are Organized
Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for
Learning (Pre K-12) offers a vision of environmental
education that makes sense within the formal education
system and promotes progress toward sustaining a healthy
environment and quality of life. Guidelines are suggested for
each of three grade levels—fourth, eighth, and twelfth. Each
guideline focuses on one element of environmental literacy,
describing a level of skill or knowledge appropriate to the
grade level under which it appears. Sample performance
measures illustrate how mastery of each guideline might be
demonstrated.
   The guidelines are organized into four strands, each of
which represents a broad aspect of environmental education
and its goal of environmental literacy. The strands are:

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Strand 1: Questioning, Analysis and
Interpretation Skills
Environmental literacy depends on learners' ability to ask
questions, speculate, and hypothesize about the world around
them, seek information, and develop answers to their
questions. Learners must be familiar with inquiry, master
fundamental skills for gathering and organizing information,
and interpret and synthesize information to develop and
communicate explanations.


Strand 2: Knowledge of Environmental
Processes and Systems
An important component of environmental literacy is
understanding the processes and systems that comprise the
environment, including human social systems and influences.
That understanding is based on knowledge synthesized from
across traditional disciplines. The guidelines in this section
are grouped in four sub-categories:
   •   2.1—The Earth as a physical system;
   •   2.2—The living environment;
   •   2.3—Humans and their societies; and
   •   2.4—Environment and society.


Strand 3: Skills for Understanding
and Addressing Environmental Issues
Skills and knowledge are refined and applied in the context of
environmental issues. These environmental issues are real-life
dramas where differing viewpoints about environmental
problems and their potential solutions are played out.
Environmental literacy includes the abilities to define, learn
about, evaluate, and act on environmental issues. In this
section, the guidelines are grouped in two sub-categories:
   •   3.1 —Skills for analyzing and investigating
       environmental issues; and
   •   3.2—Decision-making and citizenship skills.


Strand 4: Personal and Civic Responsibility
Environmentally literate citizens are willing and able to act on
their own conclusions about what should be done to ensure
environmental quality. As learners develop and apply
concept-based learning and skills for inquiry, analysis,  and
action, they also understand that what they do individually
and in groups can make a difference.

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    Taken together, these strands create a vision of
environmental literacy. The sequence of the strands—and the
individual guidelines themselves—may suggest that some
skills or knowledge serve as a foundation for others. But the
process of becoming environmentally literate is not linear, and
the sequence of the guidelines is more a function of bringing
an order and logic to this document than a reflection of a
hierarchy of skills and knowledge.
The Guidelines at a Glance
Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for
Learning (K-12) sets appropriate expectations for learner
performance and achievement at the end of fourth and eighth
grades and by high school graduation. The diagram on page 8
will help the user understand how this Guidelines document is
constructed, and what kinds of information it offers.
    Sample classroom techniques for meeting the guidelines
are included throughout the publication. These summaries
also indicate correlations to specific guidelines and suggest
additional performance measures.
    Also included in this Guidelines document are:
    •  Introductory materials that place the guidelines in
      context, outlining a comprehensive vision of
      environmental education.
    •  An easy reference chart summarizing the strands and
      guidelines (see Appendix A).
    •  Background for the Development of the Learner
      Guidelines Framework, an appendix that relates key
      developments in the field of environmental education
      to the framework around which the guidelines are
      structured (see Appendix B).
   Communication and expression are skills that are obviously critical to environ-
   mental literacy. Examples of how learners might communicate their understanding
   and express ideas and conclusions are scattered throughout this document. These
   are only a representation of the modes of artistic and linguistic expression that are
   both fundamental to, and fostered by, environmental education. The richness of the
   relationship between environmental education and the language and fine arts is not
   fully reflected by the few references made to their disciplinary standards. Learners
   should use many forms of communication in their pursuit of environmental literacy,
   ranging from oral and written communication to theater, and from dance and music
   to the visual arts.

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Sample Page
Strand 1
Questioning, Analysis and
Interpretation  Skills
euktellness
A) Questioning—Learners are able to develop questions that help
them I earn about the environment and do simpVe investigations.
                                   i
      Generate ideas and questions about objedts, organisms,
      events, places, and relationships in the environment.

      Identify questions they are likely to be able t\ answer by
      combining their own observations and investigations of the
      environment with existing information.

      Pose questions based on experiences in their own (
      nity and local  environment as well as from other so
      such as journalistic reports about the environment.
                       Organizing Strands—Divide
                       the guidelines into four broad,
                       thematic areas.
                             English Language Arts
                               38-39
                             Geography 42-43,46
                             History 20-22
                             Mathematics 23-25
                             Science 121-123
                             Mathematics 23-25
B) Designing investigations-
investigations.
-Learners are able to design simpl<
      Speculate about possible answers to their own qui
      developing and discussing simple alternative hypotti
      Design ways of answering questions based on systemati
      observations. For example, devise a way to learn about the1
      life cycle of a caterpillar or the means of transportation that
      children take to and from their school.

      Design simple experiments to answer questions and test
      ideas they have about the environment.
Connections with Other
Disciplinary Standards—
Refer to particular pages in
national standards set by
professional organizations of
several academic disciplines.
Contain standards, perform-
ance objectives, and exam-
ples related to the environ-
mental education guideline.
The documents referenced
are listed on page 9.
                                                      Guidelines—Suggest
                                                      general goals for learner
                                                      achievement.
           Sample Indicators—
           Illustrate some ways in
           which learner achievement
           might be demonstrated.
8

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Connections with Other Disciplinary Standards
These are the national standards documents referenced and the short titles used to repre-
sent them.
Short Title
Arts
                      Standards Document Referenced
                      National Standards for Arts Education: What Every Young
                      American Should Know and Be Able to Do in the Arts. Reston,
                      VA: Music Educators National Conference, 1994.
Civics and Government  National Standards for Civics and Government. Calabasas,
                      CA: Center for Civic Education, 1994.
                      Voluntary National Content Standards in Economics. New
                      York: National Council on Economics Education, 1997.
                      Standards for the English Language Arts. Urbana, IL: National
                      Council of Teachers of English, 1996.
                      Geography for Life: National Geography Standards. Washing-
                      ton, DC: National Geographic Research and Exploration,
                      1994.
                      National Standards for History. Los Angeles, CA: National
                      Center for History in the Schools, 1996.
                      Principles and Standards for School Mathematics. Reston,
                      VA: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2000.
                      National Science Education Standards. Washington, DC: Na-
                      tional Academy Press, 1996.
                      Project 2061, American Association for the Advancement of
                      Science. Benchmarks for Science Literacy. New York, NY:
                      Oxford University Press, 1993.
                      Expectations of Excellence: Curriculum Standards for Social
                      Studies. Washington, DC: National Council for the Social
                      Studies, 1994.
Economics

English Language Arts

Geography


History

Mathematics

Science

Science Benchmarks


Social Studies

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                            References
                            Brundtland, G. H. (1989) Our Common Future: The World
                                Commission on Environment and Development. New
                                York: Oxford University Press.
                            NAAEE (2004a) Environmental Education Materials:
                                Guidelines for Excellence, Washington, DC: North
                                American Association for Environmental Education.
                            NAAEE (2004b) Guidelines for the Preparation and
                                Professional Development of Environmental Educators.
                                Washington, DC: North American Association for
                                Environmental Education.
                            NAAEE (2004c) Nonformal Environmental Education
                                Programs: Guidelines for Excellence. Washington, DC:
                                North American Association for Environmental
                                Education.
                            UNCED (1992) Agenda 21: Programme of Action for
                                Sustainable Development. Rio Declaration on
                                Environment and Development.  New York: United
                                Nations.
                            UNESCO-UNEP (1976) "The Belgrade Charter." Connect:
                                UNESCO-UNEP Environmental Education Newsletter,
                                Vol. 1(1) pp. 1-2.
                            UNESCO (1978) Final Report Intergovernmental Conference
                                on Environmental Education. Organized by UNESCO in
                                Cooperation with UNEP, Tbilisi, USSR, 14-26 October
                                1977. Paris: UNESCO ED/MD/49.
                            UNESCO (1997) Educating for a Sustainable Future: A
                                Transdisciplinary Vision for Concerted Action. (Report
                                from the International Conference on Environment and
                                Society: Education and Public Awareness for
                                Sustainability, Thessaloniki, December 8-12, 1997.)
                            United Nations (2003) Report of the World Summit on
                                Sustainable Development (Johannesburg, South Africa, 26
                                August—4 September 2002) New York: United Nations
10

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GUIDELINES  FOR FOURTH  GRADE
                     Learners should be able to meet the guidelines included in this
                     section by the end of fourth grade.
                        The kindergarten through fourth grade years are a time of
                     tremendous cognitive development. By third and fourth grades,
                     learners have developed some basic skills that help them construct
                     knowledge. Instructors in earlier grade levels should use these fourth
                     grade guidelines as a target, extrapolating from this end goal
                     appropriate activities and lessons for younger learners.
                        In these early years of formal education, learners tend to be
                     concrete thinkers with a natural curiosity about the world around
                     them. Environmental education can build on these characteristics by
                     focusing on observation and exploration of the environment—
                     beginning close to home.
                     Examining Environmental Issues

                     in Fourth Grade
                     Many educators believe that exploring issues helps fourth-grade
                     learners make important links between conceptual understanding,
                     what is happening in their community, and their own responsibility
                     for environmental quality. Others caution that fourth graders are only
                     beginning to synthesize their knowledge into the kind of complex
                     understanding that is essential to examining environmental issues.
                     When deciding how to handle environmental issues in the fourth
                     grade classroom, educators must rely on their own judgment about
                     what each class—and each student—is ready to handle.
                        Basic guidelines for examining environmental issues with fourth
                     graders are:
                        •  Keep it simple.
                        •  Keep it local.

                        •  Make close links with what they're observing and learning
                           about the local environment.
                        Local solid waste and water issues easily fit these basic
                     guidelines. They are especially appropriate for these young learners.
                                                      Grades PreK-4  11

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   Understanding the Local Environment
   Experiencing and observing the local environment is an essential part of environmental
   education. Understanding thek surroundings helps learners build a strong foundation of skills and
   knowledge for reaching out further into the world and deeper into the conceptual understandings
   that environmental literacy demands. Direct experience in the environment also helps foster the
   awareness and appreciation that motivate learners to further questioning, better understanding,
   and appropriate concern and action.
       The following chart suggests ways in which learners at different grade levels might explore
   and understand the local environment. It is printed in each grade level section of these guidelines
   to help show progression as learners mature. Other ideas are included in the guidelines.
  \ Grades Pre K-4
  J Identify basic types of habitats
  *(e.g., forests, wetlands, or
  % lakes). Create a short list of
  ^plants and animals found in
  *each.
  J Trace the source of their
  * drinking water and where it
  *goes after it is used.
  * Recognize resident animal
  * species, migrants, and those
  *that pass through on migratory
  ^routes.
  * Collect or produce images of
  ithe area at the beginning of
  * European settlement.
  % Describe aspects of the
  * environment that change on
  * a daily, weekly, monthly, and
  % yearly basis.
  * Record weather observations
  *such as precipitation,
  % temperature, or cloud cover.
  % Identify food crops that are
  % grown or processed locally.
Grades 5-8
Classify local ecosystems
(e.g., oak-hickory forest or
sedge meadow). Create food
webs to show—or describe
their function in terms of—the
interaction of specific plant
and animal species.
Describe how drinking water
and wastewater are treated.
Map migratory routes of birds,
butterflies, and other animals
that pass through the area.
Identify their local habitat
needs.
Monitor changes in water or air
quality, or other aspects of the
local environment.
Identify species that are locally
threatened, endangered, or
declining in population.
Describe their habitat needs.
Identify sources of electricity
used in the community (e.g.,
hydroelectric, fossil fuels,
solar,  nuclear).
Describe the area's climate and
identify factors that contribute
to it.
Create a map for the local area
that shows where food that is
consumed locally comes from.
Grades 9-12
Identify several plants and
animals common to local
ecosystems. Describe concepts
such as succession,
competition, predator/prey
relationships, and parasitism.

Evaluate sources of nonpoint
source pollution of local bodies
of water, including sources that
are not local.

Investigate short- and long-
term environmental changes in
a local watershed, and aquifer,
or in air quality. Or document
changes in land use and their
environmental effects.
Research population trends for
a locally threatened species.
Describe changes, activities,
and other factors that seem to
affect the population trends.
Calculate the potential for
generating wind or solar power
on a particular site.

Trace human population trends
for their region and make
projections, based on research
findings, for the future.
12  Grades Pre K-4

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Strand 1 —
Questioning, Analysis and
Interpretation Skills
Guidelines:
A) Questioning—Learners are able to develop questions that
help them learn about the environment and do simple
investigations.
    •   Identify questions they are likely to be able to answer
       by combining their own observations and
       investigations of the environment with existing
       information.
    •   Pose questions based on experiences in their own
       community and local environment as well as from
       other sources, such as journalistic reports about the
       environment.

    •   Generate ideas and questions about objects,  organisms,
       events, places, and relationships in the environment.
B) Designing investigations—Learners are able to  design
simple investigations.
    •   Predict possible answers to their own questions,
       developing and discussing simple alternative
       hypotheses.
    •   Design ways of answering questions based on
       systematic observations. For example, devise a way to
       learn about the life cycle of a caterpillar or the means
       of transportation that children take to and from their
       school.
    •   Design simple experiments to answer questions and
       test ideas they have about  the environment.
C) Collecting information—Learners are able to locate and
collect information about the  environment and environmental
topics.
    •   Observe and record characteristics, differences, and
       change in objects, organisms, events, places, and
       relationships in the environment.

    •   Find, assess, select, and use resources such as atlases,
       data bases, charts, tables, graphs, and maps.
    •   Use basic field skills, such as observing, interviewing
       and measuring, to collect information.
References to Standards:

English Language Arts 38-39
Geography 42-43,46
History 20-22
Mathematics 108,176
Science 121-123
Science Benchmarks 285
Geography 46
Mathematics 176
Science 122
Science Benchmarks 10
Arts 31
English Language Arts 27-29,
   38-39
Geography 46, 106-107
History 22
Mathematics 78,102,148,158,
   170
Science 122
Science Benchmarks 10,285-286
Social Studies 35
                                                            Grades PreK-4  13

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    Oil Spill Clean-Up Contest
    From: Environmental Education Association of New
    Mexico
    Grade Level: 4th
                            Correlating Guidelines:
                            Strand 1 A, B, C, E, F, G
                            Strand 2.4 A
                            Strand 3.1 A
    While on an after-school community clean-up
    walk, fourth graders from a school in New
    Mexico traced a puddle of dirty oil to the
    dumpster behind an auto lubrication service.
    The students talked to the owner, who assured
    them this was not normal procedure, and
    showed them how they collect motor oil for
    recycling.
       A follow-up class discussion generated
    a lot of questions about oil pollution. Many
    students were particularly concerned about a
    recent oil spill, which prompted an Oil Spill
    Clean Up Contest.
       Allowed to work independently or in
    groups, the students were challenged to clean
    a tablespoon of gear lube oil from a beaker of
    water. They were given three days to conduct
    research and plan their approach and each
    team was allowed to bring from home one
    shoebox-worth of equipment. To ensure
    safety, plans had to be approved by the
    teacher.
                  Then came the contest! Students tested
               their techniques, recording the time required
               to complete their process. The students then
               rated the cleanliness of each beaker and
               entered their findings into a database later
               used to examine the advantages and
               disadvantages of each method.
                  Using their research results, students also
               mapped the size  and location of the world's
               largest spills and explored actual methods of
               cleaning oil spills.
                  Finally, students devised their own
               assessments to show what they had learned,
               and still wanted to learn, about oil spills.
               Assessments included books created for third
               graders, a computerized presentation, a comic
               book, and illustrated essays.
History 20-21
Science 121-123
    •  Use tools such as rulers, thermometers, watches,
       scales, magnifiers, and microscopes to make obser-
       vations and measurements.

    •  Use computers, calculators and other devices to
       conduct investigations and manipulate information.

D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—Learners
understand the need to use reliable information to answer their
questions. They are familiar with some basic factors to
consider in judging the merits of information.

    •  Provide specific examples of information they believe
       to be factual, fictitious, or of questionable merit and
       explain their reasoning.

    •  Identify some factors that might influence the
       credibility of a specific source of information, for
       example, who created it, how old it is, and what kind
       of arguments or  evidence are used.
14  Grades Pre K-4

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E) Organizing information—Learners are able to describe
data and organize information to search for relationships and
patterns concerning the environment and environmental
topics.
    •   Summarize observations and describe data.

    •   Construct, read, and interpret maps, graphs, tables,
       diagrams, and other displays of data.
    •   Identify patterns in events, designs, organisms, and
       sets of numbers.
    •   Describe  mathematical relationships and use those
       relationships as a way of organizing data. For
       example,  chart the relationship between plant growth
       and different amounts of water or sunlight.
F) Working with models and simulations—Learners
understand that relationships, patterns, and processes can be
represented by models.
    •   Interpret information and situations by noting
       associations and similarities, and recognizing patterns,
       trends, relationships, and sequences.
    •   Give examples of models or simulations and how they
       can be used to learn about what they represent.
       Identify ways in which a model differs from what it
       represents.

    •   Use a number of types of models such as geometric
       figures, graphs, and maps to summarize observations
       of the environment.
G) Drawing conclusions and developing explanations—
Learners can develop simple explanations that address their
questions about the environment.
    •   Summarize information, compare findings, and use
       basic mathematics to analyze data.
    •   Identify information that is not relevant to a proposed
       explanation and explain their reasoning.
    •   Use models and examples to explain their thinking.

    •   List strengths and weaknesses of the explanations they
       propose.
Arts 34
English Language Arts 35-36
Geography 47, 107-111
Mathematics 90,108, 132,136,
    158,176,200,206
Science Benchmarks 10-11
Geography 47-48, 106-107
Mathematics 90,96,158,164
Science Benchmarks 267-268
English Language Arts 38-39
Geography 48-49
History 22
Mathematics 108, 132, 136,158,
    176, 200, 206
Science Benchmarks 10-11
                                                             Grades PreK-4  15

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                              Strand 2—
                              Knowledge of Environmental Processes
                              and Systems

                              Strand 2.1 —The Earth as a Physical System

 References to Standards:    Guidelines:
 G     h 118 119               ^ Processes that shape the Earth—Learners are able to
 Science Benchmarks 72            identify changes and differences in the physical environment.
                                 •  Identify some of the forces that cause erosion within
                                    their own region, pointing out factors such as freezing
                                    and thawing, wind, waves, and gravity.
                                 •  Identify some distinctive landforms within their region
                                    and, using maps and images, in other areas of the
                                    world.
                                 •  Differentiate among climates, considering factors such
                                    as precipitation, temperature, and resident plants and
                                    animals and how they form the different biomes.
                                 •  Observe and record seasonal differences. For example,
                                    draw a series of pictures or compile photographs that
                                    illustrate differences such as day length, migration of
                                    specific bird species, and when specific tree species
                                    lose their leaves.
~—                     B) Changes in matter—Learners are able to identify basic
 Science 127                      /    .  . ..    -   , ,      .     „             J
 Science Benchmarks 76-77          characteristics of and changes in matter.
                                 •  Describe objects in terms of the materials they are
                                    made of and their observable properties. For example,
                                    describe buildings constructed with different materials
                                    and discuss why these materials may have been
                                    selected based on such properties as rigidity, ability to
                                    reflect or gather heat, and transparency.
                                 •  Identify the effects of factors such as heating, cooling,
                                    and moisture on the properties of materials and how
                                    quickly change happens. For example, describe the
                                    change of water from solid to liquid to gas in the
                                    environment.

                                 •  Describe the basic elements of the hydrologic cycle
                                    and geologic processes (including weathering, erosion,
                                    and deposition). Locate examples of these in the local
                                    environment.
 16  Grades PreK-4

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C) Energy—While they may have little understanding of
formal concepts associated with energy, learners are familiar
with the basic behavior of some different forms of energy.
    •  Identify different forms of energy including radiant
       light, geothermal, electrical, and magnetic  energy.
       Identify examples of these different forms  in their
       homes, school, community, and natural environment.
    •  Explain some of the ways in which heat, light, or
       electricity are produced, travel, stored and  used. Use
       examples such as the sun, power generation, batteries,
       and so forth.
                 Science 127
                 Science Benchmarks 83-84
    Finding Urban Nature
    From: Changing What We Do, North American
    Association for Environmental Education, Rock Spring,
    Georgia
    Grade Level: 3rd
             Correlating Guidelines:
             Strand 1 A, B, C, F, G
             Strand 2.2 A, C
   What's better than having fun volunteers
   leading outdoor activities with your students?
   Having FUN volunteers!
       Finding Urban Nature (FUN) is an
   initiative of the VINE (Volunteer-Led
   Investigations in Neighborhood Ecology)
   program, a national program available in
   many urban areas. Specially trained parent
   volunteers work with schools to develop pre
   and post classroom studies to enhance a FUN
   visit to the school site.
       One Seattle teacher tied his planned FUN
   visit to a year-long unit on habitats. The unit
   began when the teacher placed a cracked
   aquarium in front of his third grade students
   and asked what they wanted to do with it.
   Before long, the aquarium became a four-star
   worm hotel!
       The teacher asked what the worms would
   need to live in their habitat. The discussion
   triggered as many questions as answers: What
   do worms eat? Why do they come out when it
   rains? Are they really more active at night?
   The questions were recorded in a concept map
   that laid the foundation for many future
   investigations.
    Prepared by schoolyard observations and
research, the students built their worm hotel.
Anxiously, they designed experiments to find
answers to all their questions. Carefully, they
poured water into one corner to study how
worms react to rain. The students blocked
light from one side of the aquarium to see if
they could learn why worms come out at
night. Hand lenses, microscopes  and soil
guides became routine tools as the third
graders enthusiastically explored every
change.
    Volunteer seedlings sprouted, launching
more investigations on plants and roots.
Students discovered that worms and plants
were interconnected, an essential part of
understanding habitats.
    When the FUN volunteers arrived, the
students were proud of what they knew. Even
better, they were excited to learn more, readily
grasping new ideas about the effects of
temperature, wind, and light.
                                                               Grades Pre K-4   17

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                               Strand 2.2—The Living Environment


 References to Standards:     Guidelines:
~~.    ~   ~   ,  ,., ,.,        A) Organisms, populations, and communities—Learners
 Science Benchmarks 102-103,         '   6   ,,   '   .  ..  ..     ,,-.«.                 . ,
    j j j i j g                    understand basic similarities and differences among a wide
 Science 127-129                  variety of living organisms.  They understand the concept of
 Geography 120                   habitat.

                                  •  Identify similarities and differences among living
                                     organisms ranging from single-celled organisms they
                                     can observe under microscopes to plants and animals
                                     they encounter through direct observation, videos,
                                     books, or other media.

                                  •  Classify or group organisms using categories such as
                                     how animals bear their young, anatomical features, or
                                     habitats.

                                  •  Describe the basic needs of all living things and
                                     explain how organisms meet their needs in different
                                     types of environments such as deserts, lakes, or
                                     forests.
—:	    B) Heredity and evolution—Learners understand that plants
 Science 127-129                  an(j animals have different characteristics and that many of
 Science Benchmarks 107, 123        ^.1.1.   *  • *•      •  i_  •„. j
                               the characteristics are inherited.
                                  •  Identify some basic traits of plants and animals. Give
                                     examples of how those traits may vary among
                                     individuals of the same species.

                                  •  Identify some similarities among offspring and parents
                                     as being inherited and others as resulting from the
                                     organism's interactions with its environment.
                                  •  Compare fossil life forms and living organisms to
                                     identify similarities and differences between
                                     organisms that lived  long ago and those alive today.
~     iTTv>                   C) Systems and connections—Learners understand basic
 SciencT 129                      ways in which organisms are related to their  environments
 Science Benchmarks 72, 102, 116     and to Other organisms.
                                  •  Describe ways in which an organism's behavior
                                     patterns are related to its environment. Identify
                                     examples of environmental change and discuss how
                                     these changes may be helpful or harmful to particular
                                     organisms.
                                  •  Identify ways in which organisms (including humans)
                                     cause changes in their own environments. Create a skit
                                     that shows how these changes may help or harm both
 18  Grades PreK-4

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       the organisms that caused the change and other
       organisms.
   •   Identify ways in which organisms are interdependent.
       For example, some animals eat plants, some fish
       depend on other fish to keep them free of parasites,
       earthworms keep soil loose and fertile, which makes it
       easy for plants to grow.
D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners know that living
things need some source of energy to live and grow.
   •   Explain how most living organisms depend on the sun
       as the source of their life energy. Give examples that
       illustrate the understanding that animals ultimately
       depend on plants for this energy and that plants depend
       on the sun. Use this idea to trace the energy in the food
       they eat for lunch back to the sun.
   •   Describe how matter can be recycled, sometimes in a
       changed form from the original material. Use
       examples from their own experience, such as fleece
       jackets made from recycled soda bottles or envelopes
       made from recycled telephone books. Or make their
       own recycled paper and explain how the use of matter
       differs between making recycled paper and new (or
       "virgin") paper.

   •   Explain the process of life, growth, death, and decay
       of living organisms as a form of recycling. For
       example, use a compost pile to study recycling of
       organic materials.
Science 129
Science Benchmarks 119
Strand 2.3—Humans and Their Societies


Guidelines:
A) Individuals and groups—Learners understand that people
act as individuals and as group members and that groups can
influence individual actions.
   •   Give examples of influences on individual behavior,
       particularly behavior that affects the environment.
       For example, discuss why a person might choose to
       dispose of household garbage, candy wrappers, or
       toxic products in certain ways. Consider influences
       such as financial costs, convenience, laws, and the
       opinions of friends and family members.

   •   Identify some of the many groups that a person can
       belong to at the same time. Describe some tensions
References to Standards:

Science Benchmarks 140, 154,
   158
Social Studies 57-62
                                                           Grades PreK-4  19

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                                      that a person might feel as a result of belonging to
                                      different groups.

                                      Discuss why students might belong to school or after-
                                      school clubs (such as environmental clubs or scouting
                                      troops). Consider personal benefits (such as fun and
                                      learning) as well as good things the clubs do for the
                                      whole school or community.
                               B) Culture—Learners understand that experiences and places
 Civics and Government 15-21        may be interpreted differently by people with different
 English Language Arts 27-29,        cultural backgrounds, at different times, or with other frames
    38-39                       of reference.
 Geography 117,124-125
 History 20-21                       •   Describe their favorite place or their own community
 Science Benchmarks 154                   from a variety of perspectives, including their own.
 Social Studies 49-50
                                  •   Role-play the reactions of different people to a place
                                      or historical event—especially one with local
                                      significance.

                                  •   Compare how people live in different regions and
                                     how different cultures meet basic human needs. For
                                     example, prepare a visual display that compares how
                                     people support themselves in different regions and
                                      discuss how those livelihoods can both affect the
                                     environment and depend on the environment.
~	;—7TTT7:	    C) Political and economic systems—Learners understand
 GoTTli8126-127                mat g°vernment and economic systems exist because people
 Science Benchmarks 168-169        living together in groups need ways to do things such as
 Social Studies 63-66               provide for needs and wants, maintain order, and manage
                               conflict.
                                  •  Discuss what might happen if there were no laws to
                                     protect the environment in their area. Consider
                                     possible positive and negative effects on plants and
                                     animals, specific natural areas, landowners, specific
                                     businesses, water users, and others.
                                  •  List jobs in their community that are linked to
                                     processing natural resources. Identify clusters of
                                     related businesses and interview employees or owners
                                     to determine why those economic  activities are located
                                     in their community.

                                  •  Identify elements of infrastructure (e.g.
                                     communications and transportation systems) in their
                                     community. For example, create a map or a skit
                                     showing how information, people, and goods move
                                     from place to place. Include information about who is
                                     responsible for,  or who pays for, this infrastructure
                                     (e.g., the government, private business, individuals).


 20  Grades PreK-4

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D) Global connections—Learners understand how people are
connected at many levels—including the global level—by
actions and common responsibilities that concern the
environment.
   •   Identify ways in which individual needs and wants are
       related to environmental concerns such as energy use,
       conservation and environmental protection.
   •   Describe how trade connects people around the world
       and enables them to have things they might not be able
       or willing to produce themselves. For example, create
       a map that shows where a learner's food, clothing and
       household items are produced, where the raw materials
       come from, products that are traded into and out from
       their region, and so forth.
   •   Identify possible  environmental concerns that might
       come up in other regions or countries as a result of
       producing or shipping products that learners use
       regularly.

   •   Discuss how television, computers, and other forms of
       communication connect people around the world.
E) Change and conflict—Learners recognize that change is a
normal part of individual and societal life. They understand
that conflict is rooted in different points of view.
   •   Identify aspects of family and community life that
       have remained constant over generations,  as well as
       aspects that have changed. For example, interview
       family or community members and develop a visual
       display about their findings.
   •   Give examples of rules related to the environment at
       home, in school, or elsewhere that have changed and
       others that have stayed the same.
   •   Identify some basic ways in which individuals, groups,
       and institutions such as schools resolve conflict
       concerning the environment. For example, develop
       and perform short skits about different ways of solving
       a school problem such as littering on the playground or
       in hallways.
Civics and Government 33-34
Economics 11,13
Geography 126-127
Science Benchmarks 176
Social Studies 70-72
English Language Arts 38-39,
   45-46
Science Benchmarks 162,165,
   172
Social Studies 51-53
                                                            Grades PreK-4  21

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                               Strand 2.4—Environment and Society


 References to Standards:     Guidelines:
~                             A) Human/environment interactions—Learners understand
 SciencTlJo                     mat Pe°P^e depend on, change, and are affected by the
 Science Benchmarks 128            environment.
                                  •  Identify ways in which people depend on the
                                     environment. For example, create an artistic
                                     representation of how the environment provides food,
                                     water, air, recreation, minerals, and other resources.
                                  •  Identify ways in which human actions change the
                                     environment. For example, list changes that activities
                                     such as building houses or stores with parking lots,
                                     farming, or damming rivers have caused within their
                                     community or region.

                                  •  Describe how the environment affects human
                                     activities in their community or region. For example,
                                     describe the effects of weather or climate, the
                                     likelihood of earthquakes or flooding, soil and mineral
                                     types, or the presence of water on where people live,
                                     how they make a living, how they recreate, and so
                                     forth.
        	   B) Places—Learners understand that places differ in their
 _     .  ,.„„,„               physical and human characteristics.
 Geography 113-117               *  J
 History 29-31                       •   Identify and describe places in their region that they or
 Social Studies 54-56                     otherg think are important For example, draw
                                     pictures, create a video, or take photographs that
                                     illustrate what people find unique or important about
                                     regional landmarks, downtown areas, parks, farms,
                                     wilderness areas, and so forth.

                                  •   Discuss how humans create places that reflect their
                                     ideas, needs, and wants, as well as the physical
                                     environment. Illustrate with examples of places within
                                     their experience such as playgrounds, parks,
                                     classrooms, and homes.

                                  •   Compare their neighborhood or town with another
                                     nearby place, or compare their favorite park with
                                     another park they know. List characteristics that make
                                     one place different from another.

	;	   C) Resources—Learners  understand the basic concepts of
 Economics 1-2                  resource and resource distribution.
 Geography 136-137
 History 22                          •   Explain what a natural resource is and give examples.
 Science 140
 22  Grades Pre KM

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    •   Distinguish among resources that are renewable and
       nonrenewable, and resources (like running water or
       wind) that are available only in certain places at
       certain times.
    •   Identify ways they use resources in their daily lives.

    •   Locate sources of various resources on a map. For
       example, trace the origins of the local water supply or
       map the region's natural resources.
    •   Link patterns of human settlement and other activity
       with the presence of specific resources such as mineral
       deposits, rivers, or fertile farming areas. Research the
       origins of their own community and explain the role
       of resource availability on how the community
       developed.
D) Technology—Learners understand that technology is an
integral part of human existence and culture.
    •   Describe technologies as tools and ways of doing
       things that humans have invented. Give examples of
       technologies that affect their lives in areas such as
       transportation, communications, and entertainment.

    •   Interview family members or community members to
       trace technological changes that have taken place over
       the last three generations.
    •   Identify drawbacks and benefits of specific
       technologies. Consider the fact that technologies can
       benefit some humans and other organisms while
       harming others.

    •   Identify important technological systems  such as
       agriculture, transportation, and manufacturing.
E) Environmental issues—Learners are familiar with some
local environmental issues and understand that people in other
places experience environmental issues as well.
    •   Discuss some local environmental issues by
       identifying some changes or proposals that people
       disagree about. Describe or role-play how different
       people feel about these changes and proposals.
    •   Discuss how people in other places with similar
       conditions might react or perceive the situation in
       similar ways.
History 37-38
Science 140
Science Benchmarks 54-55, 184-
    185,188-189,193, 197-198,
    201-202,205
Geography 140-141
                                                             Grades Pre K-4  23

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References to Standards:

Arts 31
English Language Arts 38-39
History 6,23
Social Studies 49-53, 57-62
Geography 132-133
Social Studies 54-56
Geography 141
History 23
Social Studies 73-75
Strand 3—

Skills for Understanding and Addressing

Environmental Issues


Strand 3.1 —Skills for Analyzing and Investigating
Environmental Issues


Guidelines:
A) Identifying and investigating issues—Learners are able
to identify and investigate issues in their local environments
and communities.
   •   Identify and describe a current or historical
       environmental issue in their community.

   •   Use primary and secondary sources of information to
       explore the dilemma confronting people in a current or
       historical situation that involves the environment.
   •   Apply ideas of past, present, and future to local
       environmental issues. For example, describe what has
       changed, is changing, and could change or discuss
       how long the issue has existed.

   •   Identify people and groups that are involved.

   •   Identify some of the decisions and actions related to
       the issue.
B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—As learners
come to understand that environmental and social phenomena
are linked, they are able to explore the consequences of
issues.
   •   Observe and speculate about social, economic, and
       environmental effects of environmental changes and
       conditions, and proposed solutions to issues. For
       example, describe short-term and long-term effects of
       existing uses of land or another resource in the home,
       community, and region.
   •   Discuss how an environmental issue affects different
       individuals and groups.
C) Identifying and evaluating alternative solutions and
courses of action—Learners understand there are many
approaches to resolving issues.
   •   Identify proposed  solutions to an issue and discuss
       arguments for and against them.
24  Grades PreK-4

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    People Can Choose to Care About
    and Protect Living  Things
    From: A Child's Place in the Environment,
    Lessons 16-18, California Department of   Education,
    Sacramento, California
    Grade Level: 1st
            Correlating Guidelines:
            Strand 1 B, C
            Strand 2.2 A, C
            Strand 2.4 A
            Strand 3.2 A, C,D
    This series of lessons focuses on people's
    attitudes and actions toward other living
    things. It is part of a lengthy integrated first
    grade unit on respecting living things.
        The lessons begin by introducing the
    students to role models that care for living
    things. Professionals whose work involves
    protecting wildlife and habitats are invited to
    speak to the class. The teacher also reads
    stories such as Miss Rumphius (by Barbara
    Cooney) and Make Way for Ducklings (by
    Robert McCloskey), which give more
    examples of people helping living things.
        Students then draw themselves and what
    they might be doing to care for living things.
    The illustrations are posted and, over several
    days, each  student is given the opportunity to
    describe their drawing.
    Lesson 17 concentrates on actions
students can take to show they care about
plants and animals, including pets. The
teacher reads Byrd Baylor's Amiga to
emphasize that wild animals are better left in
their own habitats. Students design a class
book, mural or paper quilt to illustrates kind
actions toward living things.
    In lesson 18, class members brainstorm
ideas for a community project. They gather
ideas from family, friends, and community
representatives such as veterinarians or people
working in wildlife rehabilitation. Students
then select and complete a class project.
    Finally, students write poems or stories,  or
create dioramas, collages or demonstrations
that can be presented in a special open house.
    •  Explain why various strategies may be effective in
       different situations, and that each proposed strategy is
       likely to have a different effect on society and the
       environment. Illustrate with examples from a specific
       issue.
    •  Describe some of the different levels at which action
       can be taken—for example by individuals, families,
       school classes, different levels of government, or
       businesses. Identify ways that these groups might take
       action on a specific issue.

    •  Propose alternative approaches to problems.
D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and openness—
Learners understand the importance of sharing ideas and
hearing other points of view.

    •  Engage in critique and discussion as part of the
       process of inquiry. Explain why these processes are
       important.
                English Language Arts 31-34, 41,
                    44
                Geography 140
                Mathematics 128, 194
                Social Studies 57-59
                                                               Grades PreK-4  25

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                                      Hear and respect different perspectives and
                                      communicate with people whose lives, cultures, and
                                      viewpoints are different from their own.

                                      Identify ideas and interpretations that differ from
                                      theirs. Ask questions about different perspectives and
                                      discuss their strong points and drawbacks.
                               Strand 3.2—Decision-Making and Citizenship Skills


 References to Standards:    Guidelines:
~—~TT	    A) Forming and evaluating personal views—Learners are
 Geograph  140-141               a^e to examme anc^ express their own views on
 History 23                       environmental issues.
 Social Studies 57-59                   ^   Identify and express their own ideas about
                                      environmental issues and alternative ways to address
                                      them.

                                   •   Test their views against what they know and believe,
                                      remaining open to new information and ideas.

                                   •   Identify unanswered questions.

                                   •   Identify, clarify, and express their own beliefs and
                                      values regarding the environment.
	    B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—Learners are
 Sodal StodSwST1* 3           able to think critically about whether they believe action is
                               needed in particular situations and whether they believe they
                               should be involved.
                                   •   Discuss whether citizens should take action on a
                                      particular environmental issue. Consider findings from
                                      their issue investigations such as causes of the
                                      problem and promising strategies for addressing it.
                                   •   Identify types of citizen action appropriate for a
                                      specific issue.
                                   •   Discuss whether and how they think they would like to
                                      be involved. Identify reasons for and against taking
                                      specific kinds of action.
	    C) Planning and taking action—By participating in issues
 Civics and Government 6            f ^ ^ choosing-mostly close to home-they learn the basics
 Social Studies 73-75                ..  .. . ,  ,   °   „  *     ,.           J
                               of individual and collective action.
                                   •   Develop action plans they can carry out individually,
                                      in small groups, or as  a class. Include clear reasons
                                      and goals for action. Consider the results of their
                                      environmental issue investigation and their assessment
                                      of the need for action.

 26  Grades PreK-4

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   •   Set realistic goals for action and measures of success
       consistent with learners' abilities.

   •   Decide whether their plan should be implemented
       immediately or at another time, changed, or
       abandoned; and carry through with action when
       appropriate.

D) Evaluating the results of actions—Learners understand
that civic actions have consequences.

   •   Describe the apparent effects of their own actions and
       actions taken by other individuals and groups.

   •   Discuss some of the reasons why identifying the
       effects of actions may be difficult. Consider, for
       example, the time required to see effects, the
       influences of others' actions, and other changes in the
       situation.
History 23-24
Social Studies 73-75
Strand 4-

Personal and Civic Responsibility


Guidelines:
A) Understanding societal values and principles—Learners
can identify fundamental principles of U.S. society and ex-
plain their importance in the context of environmental issues.

    •   Identify examples of beliefs that many U.S. citizens
       hold in common, such as the importance of individual
       property rights, the right to pursue happiness, the
       public or common good, and the well-being of future
       generations. Create a skit that explores why people
       might decide to act on environmental issues,
       considering possible connections with these basic
       beliefs.
    •   Discuss how their own beliefs about the environment,
       environmental issues, and society compare to these
       general, societal beliefs.
    •   Recognize tensions that occur when basic values and
       beliefs differ. Illustrate with examples from local
       environmental issues.
B) Recognizing citizens' rights and responsibilities—
Learners understand the basic rights and responsibilities of
citizenship.

    •   Identify examples of the personal, political, and
       economic rights of U.S. citizens.
References to Standards:

Arts 31
Civics and Government 22-27
English Language Arts 44
Social Studies 60-64, 73-75
Civics and Government 35-37
Social Studies 73-75
                                                            Grades PreK-4  27

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                                   •  Identify examples of the responsibilities of citizenship.
                                   •  Discuss rights and responsibilities in the context of
                                      local environmental issues.
	    C) Recognizing efficacy—Learners possess a realistic self-
 Civics and Government 38-39       confidence in their effectiveness as citizens.
 Social Studies 73-75
                                   •  Describe ways in which individuals and groups act
                                      within their community to protect the environment.
                                      Identify cases where citizen action has had an effect
                                      on an environmental decision or action.

                                   •  Identify ways in which they have made a difference
                                      through their own actions. Give examples from
                                      situations over which learners have some control (for
                                      example, in the classroom, at home, or in the
                                      community) and that are appropriate to their level of
                                      understanding.
	    D) Accepting personal responsibility—Learners understand
 Civics and Government 38-39        ^ m   haye responsibility for the effects of their actions
 Social Studies 60-64                      J        r        J
                                   •  Identify and describe some of the effects that they and
                                      the groups they belong to (e.g., family or school class)
                                      have on the environment and on humans and other
                                      living beings.
                                   •  Discuss the notion of responsibility and identify some
                                      of their personal responsibilities.
     Recycling Snowballs                        Correlating Guidelines:
     _      _      _     , ^  .    .„      .               Strand 1A
     From: Getting Started, National Consortium           <,.    . ~ 2 n
        for Environmental Education and Training,          Strand 2 3 A C E
        Ann Arbor, Michigan                             Strand 24 ^ c'
     Grade Level: Lower Elementary                      Strand 4 C D


    Third graders at Greenwood Elementary        The mayor listened carefully, then explained
    School in LeGrande, Oregon set up a class       budget issues at the heart of the drop-off
    recycling center that snowballed into an         station's problems.
    exploration of a town problem. With their          Thg snowfeall k   rom    next> the
    success at schoo, the students decided to        students stafted to investi  te      to reduce
    encourage recycling at home. But when         and feuse dassroom materiais.
    families took materials to the town recycling
    center, they found the bins unattended and
    spilling over.
       The students were also learning about
    local government, so they invited  the mayor to
    speak to their class about recycling problems.
 28  Grades PreK-4

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GUIDELINES FOR THE EIGHTH GRADE
                            Learners should be able to meet the guidelines included in this
                            section by the end of eighth grade.
                               In the fifth through eighth grades, learners begin to
                            develop skills in abstract thinking and continue to develop
                            creative thinking skills—and along with these, the ability to
                            understand the interplay of environmental and human social
                            systems in greater depth. Environmental education can foster
                            this development by focusing on investigation of local
                            environmental systems, problems,  and issues. As learners
                            become actively engaged in deciding for themselves what is
                            right and wrong, educators can use environmental problems to
                            help learners explore their own responsibilities and ethics.
                            Strand 1 -
                            Questioning, Analysis and
                            Interpretation Skills
References to Standards:

Geography 49
Mathematics 248
Science 145
Mathematics 248
Science 145, 148
Guidelines:
A) Questioning—Learners are able to develop, focus, and
explain questions that help them learn about the environment
and do environmental investigations.

   •  Identify environmental questions based on personal
      experiences both in and outside school, newspaper and
      magazine articles, television or radio news, or videos.
Summarize an environmental problem or situation to provide
context for, or explain the origin of, a particular question.
Create visual presentations (such as maps, graphs, or video
tapes) and written and oral statements that describe their
thinking about the problem.
   •  Pose clear questions and ideas to test (hypotheses),
      reformulating them when necessary.
   •  Clarify their own beliefs about the environment and
      discuss how those beliefs are reflected in the questions
      they ask.
B) Designing investigations—Learners  are able to design
environmental investigations to answer particular questions—
often their own questions.

   •  Select types of inquiry appropriate to their questions.
                                                       Grades 5-8
                                                29

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   Understanding the Local Environment
   Experiencing and observing the local environment is an essential part of environmental
   education. Understanding their surroundings helps learners build a strong foundation of skills and
   knowledge for reaching out further into the world and deeper into the conceptual understandings
   that environmental literacy demands. Direct experience in the environment also helps foster the
   awareness and appreciation that motivate learners to further questioning, better understanding,
   and appropriate concern and action.
       The following chart suggests ways in which learners at different grade levels might explore
   and understand the local environment. It is printed in each grade level section of these guidelines
   to help show progression as learners mature. Other ideas are included in the guidelines.
   Grades Pre K-4
   Identify basic types of habitats
   (e.g., forests, wetlands, or
   lakes). Create a short list of
   plants and animals found in
   each.
   Trace the source of their
   drinking water and where it
   goes after it is used.
   Recognize resident animal
   species, migrants, and those
   that pass through on migratory
   routes.
   Collect or produce images of
   the area at the beginning of
   European settlement.
   Describe aspects of the
   environment that change on
   a daily, weekly, monthly, and
   yearly basis.
   Record weather observations
   such as precipitation,
   temperature, or cloud cover.
   Identify food crops that are
   grown or processed locally.
                      Grades 5-8
                      Classify local ecosystems
                      (e.g., oak-hickory forest or
                      sedge meadow). Create food
                      webs to show—or describe
                      their function in terms of—the
                      interaction of specific plant
                      and animal species.
                      Describe how drinking water
                      and wastewater are treated.
                      Map migratory routes of birds,
                      butterflies, and other animals
                      that pass through the area.
                      Identify their local habitat
                      needs.
                      Monitor changes in water or air
                      quality, or other aspects of the
                      local environment.
                      Identify species that are locally
                      threatened, endangered, or
                      declining in population.
                      Describe their habitat needs.
                      Identify sources of electricity
                      used in the community (e.g.,
                      hydroelectric, fossil fuels,
                      solar, nuclear).
                      Describe the area's climate and
                      identify factors that contribute
                      to it.
                      Create a map for the local area
                      that shows where food that is
                      consumed locally comes from.
Grades 9-12
Identify several plants and
animals common to local
ecosystems. Describe concepts
such as succession,
competition, predator/prey
relationships, and parasitism.
Evaluate sources of nonpoint
source pollution of local bodies
of water, including sources that
are not local.
Investigate short- and long-
term environmental changes in
a local watershed, and aquifer,
or in air quality. Or document
changes in land use and their
environmental effects.
Research population trends for
a locally threatened species.
Describe changes, activities,
and other factors that seem to
affect the population trends.
Calculate the potential for
generating wind or solar power
on a particular site.
Trace human population trends
for their region and make
projections, based on research
findings, for the future.
30
Grades  5-8

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   •   Define the scope of their inquiry, identifying the main
       variables and phenomena to be studied.
   •   Select appropriate systems of measurement and
       observation.
   •   Select tools that are appropriate for their
       environmental investigations based on the question
       asked and the type of information sought.
C) Collecting information—Learners are able to locate and
collect reliable information about the environment or
environmental topics using a variety of methods and sources.
   •   Observe systematically, measure accurately, and keep
       thorough and accurate records, which may include
       written notes and data tables, sketches, and
       photographs.
   •   Understand and use various systems of measurement
       and derived measurements such as rates.
   •   Assess, choose, and synthesize materials from
       resources such as aerial photographs, topographic
       maps, and satellite images; library and museum
       collections, historical documents, and eyewitness
       accounts; computerized databases and spreadsheets;
       the internet; and government records.
   •   Collect firsthand information about their own
       community using field study skills.
D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—Learners are able
to judge the weaknesses and strengths of the information they
are using.
   •   Identify and evaluate vague claims they hear on
       television or through other media. For example,
       examine the credibility of results of public opinion
       polling about environmental topics, considering such
       factors as sampling methods, logical conclusions, and
       appropriate analogies.
   •   Identify factors that affect the credibility of
       information, including assumptions and procedures
       used to create it; the social, political, and economic
       context in which the information was created; and
       potential bias due to omission, suppression, or
       invention of factual information.

   •   Examine evidence, identify faulty reasoning, and
       apply other basic logic and reasoning skills in
       evaluating information sources.
Arts 47
English Language Arts 27-28,
   38-40
Geography 49-50, 144-145
History 67-68
Mathematics 214,222,232,240
Science 145
Science Benchmarks 294
Social Studies 85-87
History 67-68
Mathematics 248,256
Science 143,148
                                                             Grades 5-8
                      31

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    Butterflies After the Hurricane
    From: Judi Kohler, Village Pines School
    Grade Level: 5th-6th
                                                Correlating Guidelines:
                                                Strand 1 B, C, E, F
                                                Strand 2.2 A, C
    In 1992, Hurricane Andrew left this Florida
    school with little remaining landscaping. By
    creating a butterfly garden, one middle school
    class turned the difficult experience into a
    rewarding interdisciplinary unit on habitat
    restoration.
       Students used their math skills to measure
    the garden plot and figure out how many
    plants could fit into the area. In language
    arts, they wrote letters seeking help selecting
    plants, and spelling lessons focused on
    related vocabulary words. The butterflies
    inspired haiku and acrostic poems, while
    illustrating the poems drew upon the
    students' artistic skills.
                                     In social studies, students researched the
                                  places butterflies live, and studied the
                                  different cultures found along their migratory
                                  routes.
                                     A field trip to a local nature center
                                  provided an opportunity to learn from a local
                                  expert about the needs of butterflies, and
                                  scientific observations unveiled the mysteries
                                  of metamorphosis and the life cycle of a
                                  butterfly.
Arts 50
English Language Arts 35-36
Geography 50-51, 144-145
Mathematics 222, 248, 274, 280
Science 145
                       •   Identify gaps in information that indicate a need for
                           further discovery or inquiry.

                       •   Evaluate data and evidence for accuracy, relevance,
                           significance, appropriateness, and clarity.
                    E) Organizing information—Learners are able to classify
                    and order data, and to organize and display information in
                    ways that help analysis and interpretation.
                       •   Present environmental data in a variety of formats
                           including charts, tables, plots, graphs, maps, and flow
                           charts. For example, chart stream flows, create a map
                           of local businesses that require air quality permits, or
                           organize survey results into a table.
                       •   Explain why they chose specific ways of ordering and
                           displaying information. Consider factors such as the
                           question being answered, the type of information, and
                           the purpose of the display.

                       •   Present environmental data in ways that demonstrate
                           possible relationships between sets of information
                           such as population census counts of a certain bird
                           species and the prevalence of certain tree species or
                           habitat types.
32
Grades 5-8

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F) Working with models and simulations—Learners
understand many of the uses and limitations of models.
   •   Describe how models are used to think about long-
       term processes such as population growth or processes
       that are difficult to see such as bird migration or the
       movement of the planets in relationship to the sun.

   •   Use models to represent and investigate aspects of the
       physical world such as weather and specific
       phenomena such as hurricanes.
   •   Manipulate mathematical and physical models using a
       computer.

   •   Evaluate models based on the question being
       investigated. Account for variables such as the
       complexity of the model, its scale, its ability to
       represent important features of the process being
       modeled, and its reliability and accuracy.
   •   Recognize limitations of models and simulations. For
       example, describe a situation in which a model of an
       environmental phenomenon is not useful.
G) Drawing conclusions and developing explanations—
Learners are able to synthesize their observations and findings
into coherent explanations.
   •   Distinguish between description and explanation and
       give examples of each based on their own
       environmental investigations.
   •   Consider the possible relationships among two or
       more variables.
   •   Propose explanations based on what they observed or
       learned through research, selecting which evidence to
       use and accounting for discrepancies. Synthesize and
       interpret information from a range of sources.
   •   List strengths and weaknesses of proposed
       explanations. Discuss how the proposed explanation
       could be rejected or its reliability improved.
   •   Use their proposed explanations to form new questions
       and suggest new avenues of inquiry.
Geography 144-145
Mathematics 222,232
Science 145
Science Benchmarks 286-287
English Language Arts 39-40
Geography 51-52
History 68-70
Mathematics 222,248,274,280
Science 145,148
                                                            Grades 5-8
                      33

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                              Strand 2—
                              Knowledge of Environmental Processes
                              and Systems

                              Strand 2.1 —The Earth as a Physical System

 References to Standards:     Guidelines:
 Geography 156-157               ^) Pr°cesses that shape the Earth — Learners have a basic
 Science 158-160                 understanding of most of the physical processes that shape the
 Science Benchmarks 73            Earth. They are able to explore the origin of differences in
                              physical patterns.

                                 •  Analyze physical patterns such as climate, areas of
                                    geothermal activity, soil types, and arid regions,
                                    suggesting reasons for these patterns. Explain these
                                    patterns in terms of abrupt forces (such as earthquakes
                                    or major storms) and long-term processes (such as
                                    erosion and rock formation), as well as those that are
                                    human-caused (such as suburban development or
                                    agricultural practices).
                                 •  Predict the consequences of specific physical
                                    phenomena such as a hurricane in a coastal area or
                                    heavy grazing in an arid region.

                                 •  Relate physical processes and patterns (such as
                                    climate, weather phenomena, and seasonal change) to
                                    the Earth/sun relationship. For example, create a
                                    model that shows how seasonal change is affected by
                                    the Earth/sun relationship.
-   B) Changes in matter — Learners understand the properties
 Science Benchmarks 77-79         of ±Q substances that make up objects or materials found in
      1 D^                     -      .
                             the environment.
                                 •  Describe a variety of chemical reactions and offer
                                    examples from daily life and the local environment.

                                 •  Explain properties of materials in terms such as atomic
                                    and molecular structure or reactivity. For example,
                                    describe why particular building materials have
                                    properties such as rigidity, impermeability, or the
                                    ability to reflect or gather heat.

                                 •  Explain an object's characteristics based on its
                                    composition and how it was formed. For example,
                                    describe the characteristics of different types of rock
                                    and account for these characteristics based on their
 34       Grades 5-8

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       constituent parts and the processes by which they were
       formed.
C) Energy—Learners begin to grasp formal concepts related to
energy by focusing on energy transfer and transformations.
They are able to make connections among phenomena such as
light, heat, magnetism, electricity, and the motion of objects.
   •   Trace the flow of energy in examples that encompass
       several different transfers and transformations of
       energy. For example, trace the path of energy in the
       creation and consumption of fossil fuels.

   •   Explain how solar energy contributes to the movement
       of global  air masses, the hydrological cycle and ocean
       currents.
   •   Explain how the process of life is based on the
       conversion, utilization, storage and transfer of energy.
       For example, create a visual display that shows how
       plants or animals use energy, where that energy comes
       from, and where it goes.
Science 155
Science Benchmarks 84-85
Strand 2.2—The Living Environment
Guidelines:
A) Organisms, populations, and communities—Learners
understand that biotic communities are made up of plants and
animals that are adapted to live in particular environments.

   •   Define and give examples to illustrate the concepts of
       species, population, community, and ecosystem. Trace
       and give examples of connections among organisms at
       those levels of organization.
   •   Link features of internal and external anatomy with the
       ability of organisms to make or find food and reproduce
       in particular environments.
   •   Understand that some animals and plants have adapted
       to extreme environmental conditions. Give examples of
       adaptations that are behavioral (for example, the
       migration of Canada geese and other birds) and physical
       (such as the physical structures that enable desert
       animals and plants to exist on minimal amounts of
       water).

   •   Describe how organisms differ in how they use energy.
       For example, identify organisms that use energy quickly
       for growth and metabolism, and therefore must replace
       it quickly (e.g., a hummingbird) and others that use
References to Standards:

Geography 158-159
Science 156-157
Science Benchmarks 104
                                                             Grades 5-8
                      35

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                                      energy more slowly and therefore need to replace it
                                      less frequently (e.g., a python). Predict the habitat
                                      needs of these different types of organisms.
                               B) Heredity and evolution—Learners have a basic
 Science 157-158                     .   .   ,.     _.,  .     _      _    ,.,.„.
 Science Benchmarks 108,124        understanding of the importance of genetic heritage.
                                  •   Describe some ways in which variation among
                                      individuals of the same species can sometimes give
                                      certain individuals an advantage within a specific
                                      environment.

                                  •   Describe in general terms the theory of natural
                                      selection for particular traits and how that process can
                                      result in descendants that are quite different from their
                                      ancestors.

                                  •   Define extinction, cite evidence of extinction, and
                                      identify some of its causes.

                                  •   Discuss the possible implications of permanent loss of
                                      a species and how it affects interdependence within an
                                      ecosystem.
	    C) Systems and connections. Learners understand major
 SdenoflsVlSS                  kinds of interactions among organisms or populations of
 Science Benchmarks 117            organisms.
                                  •   Describe and give examples of producer/consumer,
                                      predator/prey, and parasite/host relationships.

                                  •   Identify organisms that are scavengers or
                                      decomposers. Describe the roles they play within
                                      particular systems focusing on their relationship to
                                      other organisms and physical elements of the system.
                                  •   Summarize how abiotic and biotic components in
                                      combination influence the structure of an ecosystem.
                                     For example, create a map for the local region that
                                      shows average temperature and rainfall correlated with
                                      local forest, grassland or desert ecosystems. Or discuss
                                     the process of soil formation in terms of the interaction
                                      of climate, geology, and living organisms.
—;	    D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners understand how
 Science                         energy and matter flows among the abiotic and biotic
 Science Benchmarks 120                °J       , ,      .       &
                               components of the environment.
                                  •  Trace the flow of energy through food webs that
                                     identify relationships among organisms in natural
                                     systems.
                                  •  Explain how matter is transferred among organisms
                                     and between organisms and their environment in these
                                     food webs.

 36        Grades 5-8

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       Describe how energy, which enters ecosystems as
       sunlight, changes form and is transferred in the
       exchanges (production, consumption, and
       decomposition) that comprise food webs.
Strand 2.3 — Humans and Their Societies
Guidelines:
A) Individuals and groups—Learners understand that how
individuals perceive the environment is influenced in part by
individual traits and group membership or affiliation.
   •   Describe individual development and identity in terms
       such as learning, perception, innate abilities, culture,
       social influences, and experience. Interpret their own
       beliefs about the environment using similar concepts.
   •   Explain how group membership—and shared values,
       beliefs, and assumptions—can influence individuals,
       impel different reactions to physical and social
                References to Standards:

                Arts 46
                Science Benchmarks 141-142,
                    155,159
                Social Studies 88-90
   PRISM—Providing Resolution with
   Integrity for a Sustainable Molokai
   From: Vicki Newberry, Kaunakakai, Hawaii
   Grade Level: Upper Elementary
             Correlating Guidelines:
             Strand 1 A, B, C, D, E,
                F,G
             Strand 2.3 C
             Strand 2.4 A, B
             Strand 3.1 A, B
   This Molokai, Hawaii upper elementary
   school class begins studying local issues early
   in the school year. To start, they learn about
   local ecology and begin developing their skills
   in issue analysis—identifying the problem,
   issue, parties, positions, beliefs, values, and
   solutions (according to Investigating
   Environmental Issues and Actions by
   Hungerford, Litherland, Peyton, Ramsey, and
   Volk).
       The students then select specific problems
    and issues to work on throughout the year.
    They are limited to island issues to make it
    easier to obtain background information and
    involve the community. Visits to field sites,
    and an in-class speakers forum help students
begin to understand the complexity of their
issues and the players involved. Further
investigations during the second quarter
deepen their understanding and help them
develop findings.
   In the spring, students sponsor a
community-wide symposium called PRISM.
The students invite an adult keynote speaker,
but the rest of the day is theirs. They write
speeches and present their findings in panels,
workshops and action-planning sessions, hi
1998, 12 different issues were explored, and
100 adults and 125 students attended the
symposium.
                                                             Grades 5-8
                                       37

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                                      environments and changes, and cause social change.
                                      For example, describe how family, religion, gender,
                                      ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and other factors may
                                      influence individuals' values and perceptions about
                                      the environment and their communities.
                                  •   Identify and critique instances of stereotyping based
                                      on group affiliation. For example, discuss how people
                                      who are all identified as "environmentalists" may have
                                      very different perspectives from one another.
     :                         B) Culture—As they become familiar with a wider range  of
 r. sr .',        .  , -_-0         cultures and subcultures, learners gain an understanding of
 bnghsn Language Arts 27-29,                              ,      .
    3g_39                       cultural perspectives on the environment and how the
 Geography 154-155,162-163         environment may, in turn, influence culture.
 Science Benchmarks 155                        .             .        .
 Social Studies 79-81                  *   Explain how the environment is perceived differently
                                      by various cultures,  and how these perspectives may
                                      influence individuals' perceptions of the environment.
                                      For example, based on stories from other cultures,
                                      script and perform scenes about what is considered
                                      beautiful, valuable, or frightening in the environment.

                                  •   Explain how new technologies can change cultural
                                      perceptions and social behavior. For example, discuss
                                      how snowmobiles have changed subsistence lifestyles
                                      in Alaska, or the impact of air conditioning on
                                      settlement in southern Florida.
                                  •   Identify ways in which transportation and
                                      communications technology helps, or has helped,
                                      spread cultural values and behavior patterns.
	    C) Political and economic systems—Learners become more
 Civics and Government 47-52,        famiHar with political and economic systems and how these
    61-70                                   *      .         .        . ,   .
 Economics 5-7 19-20 30-31         systems take the environment into consideration.

 Sden^Benctolrks 169               *   Differentiate among public and private goods and
 Social Studies 94-98                      services, using environment-related goods and
                                      services to illustrate. For example, examine the values
                                      and functions of wetlands. Distinguish among public
                                      goods, such as groundwater recharge, flood control,
                                      and wildlife habitat; and private goods, such as their
                                      value for agricultural production or water storage, or
                                      the value of draining the land for other uses. Discuss
                                      difficulties encountered in drawing these distinctions.

                                  •   Identify economic and political features of the local
                                      community and state, and describe how environmental
                                      decisions can be influenced by these economic and
                                      political systems and actors.
 38        Grades 5-8

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    •   Identify ways in which governments and economic
       systems work to protect the environment and distribute
       natural resources. Give examples of laws, incentives,
       and penalties that affect people's behavior toward the
       environment and each other.
D) Global connections—Learners become familiar with
ways in which the world's environmental, social, economic,
cultural, and political systems are linked.
    •   Explain international trade in terms  of uneven
       distribution of resources.
    •   Describe ways in which the global environment is
       affected by individual  and group actions, as well as by
       government policies and actions having to do with
       energy use and other forms of consumption, waste
       disposal, resource management, industry, and
       population.
    •   Explain how an environmental change in one part of
       the world can have consequences for other places. For
       example, develop a map or another visual presentation
       that shows the effects of acid rain or nuclear fallout in
       places distant from the source of the pollution.
    •   Identify a variety of global links, including
       transportation and communication systems, treaties,
       multi-national corporations, and international
       organizations.
E) Change and conflict—Learners understand that human
social systems change over time and that conflicts sometimes
arise over differing and changing viewpoints about the
environment.

    •   Describe patterns of change within and  across
       cultures, communities, and other groups. Consider the
       rapidity of change, mechanisms that helped spread
       change, and what motivated change. For example,
       discuss how and why wastewater treatment became a
       common practice in the United States.
    •   Explain how change affects individuals and groups
       differently and give examples of the trade-offs
       involved in decisions and actions ranging from the
       individual to the societal levels. For  example, discuss
       how a decision about where to site a landfill, build a
       chemical plant, or locate a new highway might affect
       different neighborhoods, businesses, workers, people
       of varying socio-economic  status, and others. Role
       play their reactions.
Civics and Government 71-73
Geography 164-166, 171-172
Science Benchmarks 177
Social Studies 102-104
Science Benchmarks 163, 166,
    173
Social Studies 82-84, 91-93
                                                            Grades 5-8
                      39

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                                  •  Describe and analyze examples of tensions between
                                     individual rights and benefits and the societal good.
                                     Illustrate with examples from the local community,
                                     possibly including disagreements over zoning,
                                     controversial proposals to raise taxes to pay for the
                                     purchase of open space or sewer system upgrades, or
                                     tradeoffs between commuting to work individually in
                                     a car or taking public transportation.
                                  •  Identify some of the formal and informal ways that
                                     groups (including governments) attempt to anticipate,
                                     avoid, or resolve conflicts related to the environment.
                              Strand 2.4—Environment and Society


 References to Standards:    Guidelines:
~,  ,_, ,_,               A) Human/environment interactions—Learners understand
 Geography 173-175               .,' ,            ,  ,      ,                 ,,  .,
 Science 168-169                     human-caused changes have consequences for the
                              immediate environment as  well as for other places and future
                              times.
                                  •   Describe intended and unintended environmental and
                                     social consequences associated with the changing use
                                     of technologies. Consider consequences that maybe
                                     positive as well as negative. For example, discuss
                                     particular irrigation methods, different ways of
                                     generating electrical power, or the use of synthetic
                                     pesticides.
                                  •   Explain how human-caused environmental changes
                                     cause changes in other places. For example, discuss
                                     the effects of building a dam on downstream plant and
                                     animal communities as well as on human
                                     communities.
                                  •   Describe the effects of a local environmental
                                     restoration effort, such as wetlands creation. Predict
                                     the long-term consequences of such efforts, or a
                                     particular restoration project.
	    B) Places—Learners begin to explore the meaning of places
 4rts 50 ,      , „               both close to home and around the world.
 Geography 150-155
 Social Studies 85-87,99-101            .   Analyze physical and human characteristics of places
                                     and make inferences about how and why these
                                     characteristics have developed and changed over time.
                                     For example, use maps and satellite photographs to
                                     examine how cities change in response to natural
                                     disasters such as floods, hurricanes, or earthquakes.
 40        Grades 5-8

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    Live Oaks Communities
    From: Teaching Naturally
    Grade Level: Middle School (Grades 5-8)
              Correlating Guidelines:
              Strand 1 E
              Strand 2.3 A
              Strand 2.4 A, B, C
              Strand 3.1 A, B, C, D
    Near the school, there's a wooded section of
    public land, called a green way, with a live
    oak hammock ecosystem. Taking advantage of
    the green way's proximity, four instructors
    developed a coordinated unit that used the site
    and met learning objectives for each
    discipline.
       In science, students learned about
    interrelationships by studying an oak tree and
    the diverse organisms that it supports. The
    class walked to the green way and, in small
    groups, conducted inventories of selected
    trees. The groups used field guides to identify
    and record the plants, animals, and animal
    signs they discovered.
       The math instructor helped students
    compile and graph their data and interpret
    their findings.  The students learned to
    calculate percentages by figuring the
    relationship of each animal or plant group to
    the total biodiversity of the area.
       Students read Longfellow's EvangeHne
    and other stories involving oaks, which
prompted them to write folk tales about trees.
The art teacher also got into the act with
lessons on foreground and background
perspectives that helped students draw pencil
sketches of their study trees to illustrate their
stories.
   In social studies, students estimated the age
of their trees and developed time lines of
historical events that took place during the
trees' life spans.
   As questions arose about preserving and
removing trees,  students researched city
planning, tree ordinances, and other related
civic issues.
   To culminate the interdisciplinary unit,
student groups used county maps to identify
several large oak trees, then developed a
rationale for locating a new county road that
accounted for site and materials. The
recommendations were presented in a mock
county planning meeting.
    •   Identify ways in which personal perceptions, culture,
       and technology influence people's perceptions of
       places. Discuss the importance of some places (such as
       Yellowstone National Park or the Mississippi River)
       as cultural symbols.
    •   Identify regions based on different criteria such as
       watershed boundaries, sales and service areas for
       different businesses, or the area from which sports
       teams draw fans or symphony orchestras attract
       audiences.
C) Resources—Learners understand that uneven distribution
of resources influences their use and perceived value.

    •   Map and discuss distribution and consumption
       patterns for specific resources, such as metals, fresh
                 Economics 1-3
                 Geography 176-178
                 History 67-68
                 Science 168
                                                                Grades 5-8
                                         41

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                                      water, or certain types of forests. Note resources that are
                                      being rapidly depleted.
                                   •  Explain why certain resources (such as oil, coal, or
                                      natural gas) are key to the development of human
                                      societies, and identify resources that were critical to
                                      development at different times in history.
                                   •  Explain conflicts between individuals, states, regions, or
                                      nations noting factors such as differing attitudes about
                                      the use of specific resources and scarcity of natural
                                      resources. Illustrate with local or regional examples
                                      such as conflicts over water rights  and use of habitat for
                                      local endangered species.
—;	    D) Technology—Learners understand the human ability to
 Science 169     ,„„,„,      shape and control the environment as a function of the
 Science Benchmarks 55-56, 185-          ...   ,.          ,     ,  ,      . ,   ,
    186 189-190 194 198 202-     capacities for creating knowledge and developing new
    203,'206   '   '    '         technologies.
 Social Studies 99-101                     _..      ,  ,   ,   .   .  ..     .   .  ,,,
                                   •  Discuss technologies in the context of larger systems
                                      that have shaped the course of human history as well as
                                      human relationships with the environment. Use
                                      illustrations from the agricultural,  industrial and
                                      transportation revolutions that have dramatically
                                      changed how people live and use resources.

                                   •  Analyze how the ability to develop and use technology
                                      gives humans great influence over the environment and
                                      other living things. Use examples from their region,
                                      such as the ability to construct levees to protect areas
                                      from flooding or create wildlife refuges, build machines
                                      that produce or reduce air or water pollution, or
                                      domesticate plants or animals for food production.
                                   •  Identify some of the important environmental and social
                                      issues related to particular technological developments
                                      in fields such as agriculture, manufacturing, and energy.
	    E) Environmental issues—Learners are familiar with a range
 Geography 181 -182               of environmentai issues at scaies that range from local to
                               national to global. They understand that people in other places
                               around the world experience environmental issues similar to the
                               ones they are concerned about locally.
                                   •  Identify other places, either contemporary or historical,
                                      experiencing issues similar to those in the learner's
                                      community or region.

                                   •  Explain how issues arise because of conflicting points
                                      of view about a specific proposal,  event, or condition in
                                      the environment. For example, discuss conflicting
                                      perspectives about past and present proposals to build


 42        Grades 5-8

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       large-scale dams such as the Three Gorges project in
       China, the Hetch-Hetchy dam in the U.S., or a similar
       project in the learner's region.
       Discuss how the disagreements at the heart of
       environmental issues makes them difficult to resolve.
       Consider the role of understanding, creativity, or
       compromise in finding solutions.
Strand 3-
Skills for Understanding and Addressing
Environmental Issues

Strand 3.1 —Skills for Analyzing and Investigating
Environmental Issues
Guidelines:
A) Identifying and investigating issues—Learners are able
to use primary and secondary sources of information, and
apply growing research and analytical skills, to investigate
environmental issues, beginning in their own community.
   •   Clearly articulate and define environmental issues. For
       example, describe the history and origins of the issue,
       actions that have been taken to address the issue, the
       apparent effects of these actions, and the current
       situation.
   •   Identify key individuals and groups involved, their
       viewpoints, and the types of action they support.
       Describe areas of conflict and agreement.
   •   Investigate the issue using secondary sources and
       original research where needed.
   •   Examine how others have analyzed and understood the
       issue, identifying their approaches and the
       assumptions behind them.
   •   Compare the issue with similar issues from other
       places and times.
B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—Learners are
able to apply their knowledge of ecological and human
processes and systems to identify the consequences of specific
environmental issues.

   •   Describe the effects of human actions on specific
       elements, systems, and processes of the environment.
References to Standards:

Geography 164-166, 169-170,
   179-182
History 68-70
Social Studies 79-93, 105-107
Geography 171-172
Social Studies 85-87
                                                          Grades 5-8
                     43

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                                   •   Analyze issues by looking at trade-offs that have been
                                       made. For example, consider where various human
                                       activities (such as landfills, highways, chemical
                                       factories, or hazardous waste incinerators) are located
                                       and their effects on different places and different
                                       segments of the population.

                                   •   Speculate about the effects of a proposed state or local
                                       environmental regulation. For example, consider
                                       effects on different sectors of the economy,
                                       neighborhoods, public health, particular plant and
                                       animal species and communities, and overall
                                       environmental quality.
                                   •   Predict the consequences of inaction or failure to
                                       resolve particular issues.
~  ~—~                        C) Identifying and evaluating alternative solutions and
 ffistory 7QngUaSe    S              courses of action—Learners are able to identify and develop
 Social Studies 105-107              action strategies for addressing particular issues.
                                   •   Identify different proposals for resolving an
                                       environmental issue. Recognize and explain the
                                       perspectives on the issue that are embedded in those
                                       views.
                                   •   Explain why various strategies may be effective in
                                       different situations. Consider their likely effects on
                                       society and the environment.
                                   •   Independently and in groups, develop original
                                       strategies to address issues.
                                   •   Discern similarities and differences in problem
                                       situations which might affect their ability to apply
                                       strategies that were successful in other places and
                                       times.
                                D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and openness-
_S1.,T        A.*  11 11 ,11      Learners are able to consider the assumptions and
English Language Arts 31-33,41-     .                  .  _      ,      ,  •     ,       ,
    42 44-45                     interpretations that influence the conclusions they and others
Geography 181                    draw about environmental issues.
Science 148                            _,.,     ,.         -.,       .
Science Benchmarks 286-287           *  Explain how the interplay of ideas and perspectives
Social Studies 88-90                      strengthens the process of inquiry and the societal
                                      ability to address issues.
                                   •  Receive questions and alternative explanations that
                                      others offer in discussions as well as in readings.

                                   •  Explain why it is not always possible to select one
                                      correct explanation or a single best approach to
                                      addressing an issue.
44        Grades 5-8

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Strand 3.2—Decision-Making and Citizenship Skills


Guidelines:
A) Forming and evaluating personal views—Learners are
able to identify, justify, and clarify their views on environ-
mental issues and alternative ways to address them.
    •   Discuss personal perspectives with classmates,
       remaining open to new ideas and information.
    •   Justify their views based on information from a variety
       of sources, and clear reasoning.
    •   Discuss their own beliefs and values regarding the
       environment and relate their personal view of
       environmental issues to these.
    •   Identify ways in which others' views correspond or
       differ with their own views.
B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—Learners are
able to evaluate whether they believe action is needed in
particular situations, and decide whether they should be
involved.
    •   Discuss whether action is warranted. Account for
       factors such as the scale of the problem; legal, social,
       economic, and ecological consequences; and
       alternatives to citizen action.

    •   Identify different forms of action that citizens can take
       in the economic, political, and legal spheres, as well as
       actions aimed at directly improving or maintaining
       some part of the environment or persuading others to
       take action.

    •   Speculate about the likely effects of specific actions
       on society and the environment, and the likelihood
       these actions will resolve  a specific environmental
       issue.
    •   Point out advantages and disadvantages of their
       personal involvement, considering factors such as their
       own skills, resources, knowledge, and commitment.
C) Planning and taking action—As learners begin to see
themselves as citizens taking active roles in their
communities, they are able to plan for and engage in citizen
action at levels appropriate to their maturity and preparation.

    •   Develop action plans they can carry out individually,
       in small groups, or with a class, club, or larger
       organization. Include clear reasons and goals for
References to Standards:

Arts 40
Geography 179-182
History 70
Social Studies 88-90
Civics and Government 68-70
Social Studies 105-107
Civics and Government 80-83
Social Studies 105-107
                                                             Grades 5-8
                       45

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    The Many Sides of Cotton
    From: Windows on the Wild—Biodiversity Basics,
    World Wildlife Fund
    Grade Level: Middle School (grades 6-9)
                                               Correlating Guidelines:
                                               Strand 1 A, C, D, E, G
                                               Strand 2.4 A, C, D, E
                                               Strand 3.1 A, B, C, D
    This activity is part of a broader unit on
    biodiversity, and incorporates social studies,
    science, and language arts.
       Students begin by exploring a hypothetical
    controversy, such as supposing that the school
    has to cut the budget and must choose between
    the music program or after-school sports.
    Through this exercise, students are introduced
    to issue analysis: identifying the problem, the
    issue, the parties involved and their positions,
    the beliefs that shape those positions, and the
    values that underlie them, and examine
    possible solutions.
       Once familiar with the approach, students
    apply the issue analysis process to  examine
    the pros and cons of growing organic and
                                   conventional cotton. Using readings written
                                   by people with diverse perspectives on the
                                   issue, students work individually or in groups
                                   to analyze the articles for points of agreement
                                   and disagreement, facts, opinions, and bias.
                                   Individually or in groups, they complete a
                                   chart on sorting out the issues.
                                     Finally, students write a personal position
                                   statement on conventional versus organic
                                   cotton, making sure to back up their
                                   statements with specific reasons, and
                                   describing whether and how their positions
                                   will affect their actions as a consumer and a
                                   citizen.
History 70
Social Studies 105-107
                           action. Base these plans on knowledge of a range of
                           citizen action strategies and the results of their
                           environmental issue investigations.
                       •   Set realistic goals for action and include measures of
                           success consistent with learners' abilities and an
                           understanding of the complexity of the issue.
                       •   Decide whether their plan should be implemented
                           immediately or at another time, changed, or
                           abandoned; and cany through with action when
                           appropriate.
                    D) Evaluating the results of actions—Learners are able to
                    analyze the effects of their own actions and actions taken by
                    other individuals and groups.  .
                       •   Analyze the effects of decisions, policies, and actions
                           taken by individuals  and groups on a particular issue.
                       •   Analyze their own actions, explaining apparent effects
                           and discussing them  in light of students' goals and
                           reasons for acting.
46
Grades 5-8

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       Describe some of the reasons why analyzing the
       results of actions may be difficult, including the scale
       of the issue, the time required to see effects, and the
       influence of other actions and factors.
Strand 4—
Personal and Civic Responsibility
Guidelines:
A) Understanding societal values and principles—Learners
understand that societal values can be both a unifying and a
divisive force.
   •   Identify some of the shared political values and
       principles that unite American society, and explain
       their importance.
   •   Discuss conflicting views about the meaning and
       application of shared values in specific issues. For
       example, explore conflicting views about the idea that
       one person's rights end where they infringe on
       another's. Use a specific context such as proposed
       sports stadium or whether to permit an industrial
       facility or housing development that is likely to pollute
       a stream.
   •   Identify ways in which advocates appeal to values
       such as individual freedoms, property rights, the
       public good, economic well-being, and patriotism. For
       example, analyze speeches and writings on specific
       environmental issues.
   •   Evaluate the principle of stewardship as a shared
       societal value. For example, compare conceptions of
       stewardship contained in writings of John Muir,
       Gifford Pinchot, and Aldo Leopold with their own
       understanding.
B) Recognizing citizens' rights and responsibilities—
Learners understand the rights and responsibilities of
citizenship and their importance in promoting the resolution
of environmental issues.
   •   Identify rights and responsibilities associated with
       citizenship,  including personal and civic
       responsibilities.
   •   Describe ways in which commonly accepted rights
       and responsibilities of citizenship motivate people to
References to Standards:

Civics and Government 58-60
English Language Arts 44
Social Studies 105-107
Civics and Government 74-78
Social Studies 105-107
                                                            Grades  5-8
                      47

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                                      help resolve environmental issues. Consider rights and
                                      responsibilities such as acquiring, using and selling
                                      property; the right to vote; freedom of speech and
                                      assembly; accepting responsibility for the
                                      consequences of one's actions; obeying the law; and
                                      respecting the rights and interests of others.
-    C) Recognizing efficacy — Learners possess a realistic self-
 Civics and Government 80-83        confidence in their effectiveness as citizens.
 Social Studies 91-93 105-107
                                  •   Explain the ways in which citizen action and public
                                      opinion influence environmental policy decisions.

                                  •   Describe how individuals and groups act within
                                      society to create change, meet individual needs and
                                      promote the common good. Illustrate with examples
                                      from environmental issues.
                                  •   Describe ways in which their actions have made a
                                      difference. Use examples that begin in the classroom
                                      and the home, and extend beyond to encompass the
                                      broader communities in which students begin to see
                                      possibilities for action.
-    D) Accepting personal responsibility — Learners understand
 Civics and Government 79-80                 actions cm haye broad consequences and mat they
                               are responsible for those consequences.

                                  •   Analyze some of the effects that their actions (and the
                                      actions of their families, social groups, and
                                      communities) have on the environment, other humans,
                                      and other living beings.
                                  •   Describe actions in terms of their effects that reach
                                      into the future.
                                  •   Describe their personal responsibilities, comparing
                                      their view of their responsibilities with commonly
                                      accepted societal views.
                                  •   Identify ways in which they feel responsible for
                                      helping resolve environmental issues within their
                                      community.
 48        Grades 5-8

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GUIDELINES  FOR TWELFTH GRADE
                           Learners should be able to meet the guidelines included in this
                           section by the time they graduate from high school.
                              By the end of twelfth grade, learners are well on their way
                           to environmental literacy. They should possess the basic skills
                           and dispositions they need to understand and act on
                           environmental problems and issues as responsible citizens—
                           and to continue the learning process throughout their lives. In
                           the ninth through twelfth grades, environmental education can
                           promote active and responsible citizenship by challenging
                           learners to hone and apply problem-solving, analysis,
                           persuasive communication, and other higher level skills—
                           often in real-world contexts.
                           Strand 1 —
                           Questioning, Analysis and
                           Interpretation Skills
References to Standards:

Geography 53
History 68-70
Mathematics 324
Science 175
Geography 53
History 67-68
Mathematics 324
Science 175
Guidelines:
A) Questioning—Learners are able to develop, modify,
clarify, and explain questions that guide environmental
investigations of various types. They understand factors that
influence the questions they pose.
   •  Articulate environmental phenomena or topics to be
      studied at scales ranging from local to global.
   •  Pose a research question and hypothesis, identifying
      and defining key variables. For example, develop
      hypotheses about land use in a region by drawing on
      maps, newspaper articles, databases, and personal
      observations.
   •  Identify historical and current ideas and beliefs—for
      example, about the environment, human perceptions
      of the environment, or the nature of knowledge—that
      inform their questions.
B) Designing investigations—Learners know how to design
investigations to answer particular questions about the
environment. They are able to develop approaches for
investigating unfamiliar types of problems and phenomena.
                                                       Grades 9-12
                                                49

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Understanding the Local Environment
Experiencing and observing the local environment is an essential part of environmental
education. Understanding their surroundings helps learners build a strong foundation of skills and
knowledge for reaching out further into the world and deeper into the conceptual understandings
that environmental literacy demands. Direct experience in the environment also helps foster the
awareness and appreciation that motivate learners to further questioning, better understanding,
and appropriate concern and action.
The following chart suggests ways in which learners at different grade levels might explore
and understand the local environment. It is printed in each grade level section of these guidelines
to help show progression as learners mature. Other ideas are included in the guidelines.
Grades Pre K-4
Identify basic types of
habitats (e.g., forests,
wetlands, or lakes). Create a
short list of plants and
animals found in each.
Trace the source of their
drinking water and where it
goes after it is used.
Recognize resident animal
species, migrants, and those
that pass through on
migratory routes.
Collect or produce images of
the area at the beginning of
European settlement.
Describe aspects of the
environment that change on
a daily, weekly, monthly, and
yearly basis.
Record weather observations
such as precipitation,
temperature, or cloud cover.
Identify food crops that are
grown or processed locally.









Grades 5-8 Grades 9-12
Classify local ecosystems Identify several plants and
(e.g., oak-hickory forest or animals common to local
sedge meadow). Create food ecosystems. Describe
webs to show — or describe concepts such as succession,
their function in terms of — competition, predator/prey
the interaction of specific relationships, and parasitism.
plant and animal species. Eyaluate SQUrces of nonpoint
Describe how drinking water source pollution of local
and wastewater are treated. bodies of water, including
Map migratory routes of sources ** are not locaL
birds, butterflies, and other Investigate short- and long-
animals that pass through the term environmental changes
area. Identify their local in a local watershed and
habitat needs. aquifer, or in air quality. Or
Monitor changes in water or document changes in land
air quality, or other aspects of uj!e ** their environmental
the local environment. e ec s'
Identify species that are Research population trends
locally threatened, for a locs^ ^tened
endangered, or declining in sPecies- Desc"b^ chanSes>
population. Describe their actlvlties> a"d other factors
hab'tat needs at seem to a^ect tne
population trends.
Identify sources of electricity _, , , , ...
used in the community (e.g., Calculate *e potential for
hydroelectric, fossil fuels, generating wind or solar
solar, nuclear). Power on a Particular Slte'
Describe the area's climate Tracf *" P°Pulation
and identify factors that ^ for their K%™ and
contribute to it. make ProJe<*ions, based on
research findings, for the
Create a map for the local future.
area that shows where food
that is consumed locally
comes from.

50    Grades 9-12

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    •   Select appropriate means of inquiry, including
       scientific investigations, historical inquiry, and social
       science observation and research.
    •   Select and develop appropriate problem solving
       strategies for conducting environmental investigations.

    •   Incorporate a wide range of tools and technologies as
       appropriate, including complex maps, measurement
       instruments and processes, and computer-based
       analysis.
C) Collecting information—Learners are able to locate and
collect reliable information for environmental investigations
of many types. They know how to use sophisticated
technology to collect information, including computer
programs that access, gather, store, and display data.
    •   Use basic sampling techniques such as spatial
       sampling and random sampling. Evaluate when these
       techniques are appropriate.
    •   Apply data collection skills in field situations, such as
       interviewing community members about
       environmental concerns or sampling water in a local
       stream.

    •   Gather information from a variety of sources including
       historical sites, censuses, tax records, statistical
       compilations, economic indicators, interviews or
       surveys, geographical information systems, and other
       data banks.
    •   Adjust information collection strategies to compensate
       for potential bias in information sources.
    •   Perform basic statistical analyses to describe  data
       using quantitative measures such as mean, median and
       mode.
D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—Learners  can apply
basic logic and reasoning skills to evaluate completeness and
reliability in a variety of information sources.
    •   Identify logical errors and spurious statements in
       everyday situations such as political speeches about
       the environment or commercial advertising.

    •   Look for and explain flaws such as faulty or
       misleading use of statistics, misrepresentation of data
       that is presented graphically, or biased selection  of
       data to support a claim. For example, analyze the
       public debate over  an environmental issue. Examine
English Language Arts 27-28, 38-
   40
Geography 53, 184-185
History 67-68
Mathematics 290,296, 308,320
Science Benchmarks 230
Social Studies 118-120
English Language Arts 38-39
Geography 55
History 67-68
Mathematics 324, 334
Science 175-176
Science Benchmarks 230, 234,
   300
                                                              Grades 9-12
                       51

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English Language Arts 35-36
Geography 53-54, 184-185
Mathematics 296, 324, 354,360
English Language Arts 37
Geography 54-55, 184-185
Mathematics 296, 308
Science 175
Science Benchmarks 230, 270
       speeches, advertisements, news releases, and
       pamphlets put out by groups on various sides of the
       issue.
   •   Explain why some research results are judged to be
       more credible than are others. Consider factors such as
       possible sources of bias in interpretation, funding
       sources, and research procedures.
E) Organizing information—Learners are able to organize
and display information in ways appropriate to different types
of environmental investigations and purposes.

   •   Attend to details such as the type and accuracy of data,
       scale, accuracy of representation, and ease of
       interpretation.

   •   Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the
       particular means of presentation for different purposes.
   •   Work with technology designed to relate and display
       data, such as database and mapping software.
   •   Integrate and summarize information using a variety
       of media ranging from written texts to graphic
       representations, and from audiovisual materials to
       maps and computer-generated images.
F) Working with models and simulations—Learners are
able to create, use, and evaluate models to understand
environmental phenomena.
   •   Use algebraic and geometric models to represent
       processes or objects such as movement along
       earthquake fault lines, traffic flows, or population
       growth.
   •   Use computers to create models and simulations. For
       example, project the effects of habitat fragmentation
       on species diversity, the air-quality effects of a new
       factory, the economic impacts of proposed water
       quality rules, or the visual changes a new housing
       development will make on the landscape.
   •   Compare the applicability of models for particular
       situations, considering the models' assumptions as  one
       factor. Explain how a single model may apply to more
       than one situation and how many models may
       represent a single situation.
   •   Evaluate and report the limitations of models used.
52      Grades 9-12

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   The Wood Duck Project
   From: Karen Cifranick, Joppatowne High School,
   Joppatowne, Maryland
   Grade Level: High School
             Correlating Guidelines:
             Strand 1 C, D, G
             Strand 2.2 A
             Strand 2.3 A
    Joppatowne High School's science curriculum
    is taught through investigations and hands-on
    study. One such study concerned the decline
    of wood ducks in a freshwater marsh near the
    school.
       With start-up funds from the Chesapeake
    Bay Trust, students in Joppatowne's
    environmental science class built fifty wood
    duck nesting boxes They worked with staff
    from Chesapeake Wildlife Heritage and the
    Chesapeake Bay Foundation to identify
    appropriate locations and installed the boxes
    in Maryland's Gunpowder River Marsh.
   Next, the students collected baseline data
for monitoring the use of the boxes by wood
ducks in the next nesting season. Students
compared their data to other nesting projects
in the county and state.
   When spring came, the students anxiously
collected field data to gauge nesting success.
Their findings showed 25 percent of the boxes
were occupied.
   Each year, new students continue to
monitor nesting and repair boxes as necessary.
The latest data shows 68 percent of the boxes
in use.
G) Drawing conclusions and developing explanations—
Learners are able to use evidence and logic in developing
proposed explanations that address their initial questions and
hypotheses.

   •   Use basic statistical analysis and measures of
       probability to make predictions and develop
       interpretations based on data.

   •   Differentiate between causes and effects and identify
       when causality is uncertain.
   •   Speak in general terms about their confidence in
       proposed explanations as well as possible sources of
       uncertainty and error. Distinguish between error and
       unanticipated results  in formulating explanations.
       Consider the assumptions of models and measuring
       techniques or devices as possible sources of error.

   •   Identify what would be needed to reject the proposed
       explanation or hypothesis.

   •   Based on experience, develop new questions to ground
       further inquiry. For example, draw on the results of a
       stream-monitoring  project to develop questions that
       guide an investigation into water quality issues in the
       community or the watershed.
                English Language Arts 36-37
                Geography 55-56
                History 68
                Mathematics 296, 324, 354, 360
                Science 173-176
                Science Benchmarks 230, 300
                                                              Grades 9-12       53

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References to Standards:

Geography 197-198
Science 187-189
Science Benchmarks 74
Science 177-179
Science Benchmarks 79-80
Strand 2-

Knowledge of Environmental Processes

and Systems


Strand 2.1 —The Earth as a Physical System


Guidelines:
A) Processes that shape the Earth—Learners understand the
major physical processes that shape the Earth. They can relate
these processes, especially those that are large-scale and long-
term, to characteristics of the Earth.

   •   Relate different types of climate to processes such as
       the transfer of heat energy, wind and ocean currents,
       and the cycling of water.

   •   Use examples such as the El Nino effect or the Santa
       Ana winds to illustrate how changes in wind patterns
       or ocean temperatures can affect weather in different
       parts of the world.

   •   Explain distinctive landforms in terms of the physical
       processes (particularly those related to changes in the
       Earth's crust or long-term processes such as erosion)
       that shaped them.

   •   Describe possible relationships between surface water
       and ground water. For example, create a model or a
       cross-sectional drawing that shows surface- and
       groundwater flows in a local drainage. Explain why
       surface and ground water are related in these ways.
B) Changes in matter—Learners apply their understanding
of chemical reactions to round out their explanations of
environmental characteristics and everyday phenomena.
   •   Explain everyday chemical reactions such as burning
       fossil fuels, photosynthesis, or the creation of smog in
       terms such as the release or consumption of energy,
       the products of these reactions, and how these
       products may be involved in further chemical
       reactions and/or affect biogeochemical cycles.

   •   Explain the chemical components of biological
       processes such as photosynthesis, respiration, nitrogen
       fixation, or decomposition, and how biological and
       physical processes fit in the overall process of
       biogeochemical cycling.
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   •   Explain why elements cycle through the biosphere at
       different rates, describing influences on reaction rates.
       (Oxygen and nitrogen cycle quickly, for example,
       while phosphorus tends to be released from its
       immobile form more slowly, depending upon factors
       such as soil acidity.)
C) Energy—Learners apply their knowledge of energy and
matter to understand phenomena in the world around them.
   •   Compare different means of generating electricity
       (such as coal-burning plants, nuclear fusion reactors,
       wind, geothermal,  and hydropower) in terms of the
       transformation of energy among forms, the
       relationship of matter and energy, and efficiency/
       production of heat energy.
   •   Explain differences in conductivity among materials
       and relate these ideas to real-world phenomena.
   •   Compare the efficiency of various types of motors or
       heating systems.
   •   Use the laws of thermodynamics to explain why
       natural systems need a certain amount of energy input
       to maintain their organization.
Science 180-181
Science Benchmarks 85-86, 195
Strand 2.2—The Living Environment


Guidelines:
A) Organisms, populations, and communities—Learners
understand basic population dynamics and the importance of
diversity in living  systems.

   •   Discuss the relationship of habitat changes to plant
       and animal populations. Consider such factors as
       variations in habitat size, fragmentation, and
       fluctuation in conditions such as pH, oxygen, available
       light, or water level. For example, describe the effects
       of a lake's  eutrophication on plant, insect, bacteria, and
       fish populations.
   •   Discuss some of the ways in which populations can
       change over time, using ideas such as cyclic
       fluctuations, equilibrium, and coupled oscillations.
       Evaluate influences on population growth rate,
       including reproductive strategies and resource
       limitations.
References to Standards:

Science 186
Science Benchmarks 105
                                                            Grades 9-12      55

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                                  •   Explain how diversity of characteristics among
                                      organisms of a species increases the likelihood of the
                                      species surviving changing environmental conditions.
                                  •   Explain how variation among species in a system
                                      increases the likelihood that at least some species will
                                      survive changes in environmental conditions.
-~    ~~~                     B) Heredity and evolution—Learners understand the basic
 Science Benchmarks 108-109        ^eas anc* §enetic mechanisms behind biological evolution.
    124~125                        •   Describe the mechanisms of natural selection,
                                      incorporating factors such as genetic variation, the
                                      effect of inherited characteristics on individual
                                      survival and reproduction within a given environment,
                                      and the effects of environmental change.

                                  •   Use the theory of natural selection and concepts such
                                      as mutation, gene flow, and genetic drift to account for
                                      the adaptation of species to specific environments.

                                  •   Explain the idea that the more biological diversity
                                      there is today,  the more there may be in the future.
                                      Offer examples of exceptions to this general rule, and
                                      use it to help explain past mass extinctions.
	    C) Systems and connections—Learners understand the
 Geography 158-1  9                living environment to be comprised of interrelated, dynamic
 oCicncc loo
 Science Benchmarks 117            systems.
                                  •  Apply the concepts of ecosystem and ecoregion to
                                     organize the multitude of relationships among
                                     organisms and environments encountered in earlier
                                     studies.
                                  •  Discuss the interactions among organisms and their
                                     environments. Explain ecosystem change with respect
                                     to variables such as climate change, the introduction of
                                     new species, and human impacts; and explain
                                     processes such as desertification and soil formation as
                                     mechanisms for such change.
                                  •  Describe succession in ecosystems and their
                                     constituent plant and animal communities. Illustrate
                                     this idea with examples such as the slow
                                     transformation of a volcanic island from barren rock to
                                     rain forest as initial plant colonizers create conditions
                                     favorable to other species, or the more rapid changes
                                     that occur after beavers dam a stream.
                                  •  Describe how adding a species to, or removing one
                                     from, an ecosystem may affect other organisms and
                                     the entire system.


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D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners are able to account
for environmental characteristics based on their knowledge of
how matter and energy interact in living systems.
   •   Illustrate how energy for life is provided primarily by
       continual inputs from the sun, captured by plants
       through photosynthesis and converted into carbon-
       based molecules. Describe exceptions such as
       geothermal and natural nuclear energy.
   •   Trace the flow of matter and energy through living
       systems, and between living systems and the physical
       environment. For example, show how oxygen is
       released to the atmosphere by the interaction of plants,
       animals, and non-living matter in the carbon cycle. Or
       use the carbon cycle to explain the existence of fossil
       energy sources.
   •   Explain how the abundance and distribution of living
       organisms are limited by the available energy and
       certain forms of matter such as water, oxygen, and
       minerals.
Science 186
Science Benchmarks 121
Strand 2.3—Humans and Their Societies


Guidelines:
A) Individuals and groups—Learners understand the
influence of individual and group actions on the environment,
and how groups can work to promote and balance interests.
   •   Predict how the environmental effects of their personal
       actions might change over time. Consider variables
       such as technological advances, lifestyle changes, or
       taking on such roles as business owners, employees in
       various careers, or parents.
   •   Analyze how the actions of societal organizations such
       as businesses or community groups may have
       environmental consequences and other impacts that go
       beyond the intended aims of the group.
   •   Describe how particular groups meet or balance
       individual needs, group goals, and the common
       societal good. Use examples such as conservation
       organizations, organizations of professionals in
       environmental or resource management fields,
       community associations, or business groups.
References to Standards:

Economics 1-3,19-20
Science Benchmarks 142,156,
   160
Social Studies 121-126
                                                           Grades 9-12       57

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Civics and Government 103-105
Geography 195-196
Social Studies 111-112
B) Culture—Learners understand cultural perspectives and
dynamics and apply their understanding in context.

    •   Analyze how cultural change and altered views of the
       environment are related. For example, discuss how the
       shift away from a largely rural society to a
       predominantly urban one may influence changing
       perceptions of the environment.
    •   Recognize diverse cultural views about humans and
       the  environment. Anticipate ways in which people
       from different cultural perspectives and frames of
       reference might interpret data, events, or policy
       proposals.

    •   Describe and compare historical and contemporary
       societal strategies for adapting to environmental or
       social change while preserving and transmitting
   Getting  Involved in a Local Landfill
   From: Environmental Education Association of New
   Mexico
   Grade Level: High School
                            Correlating Guidelines:
                            Strand 1 A, B, C, E, G
                            Strand 2.1 A
                            Strand 2.2 A, C
                            Strand 2.3 A, B, C, E
                            Strand 2.4 A, B, C, D, E
                            Strand 3.1 A, B, D
                            Strand 3.2 A
   When a controversial landfill opened near
   their southern New Mexico community, local
   high school students expressed concerns to
   teacher, Mr. Licona. Knowing his students
   needed to be informed about landfills, Licona
   provided several avenues of investigation.
   Students teamed up for a year-long research
   project that ultimately earned university
   scholarships for two students, and
   employment at the landfill for a third.
       Grants, fundraising activities, and
   personal funds  ensured that the students'
   vantage point was not restricted. With these
   funds, the students were able to visit research
   areas including the proposed location for
   burial of low-level nuclear waste near
   Carlsbad and a Texas site where sewage
   sludge is applied to the arid desert land.
        Guest speakers from New Mexico State
    University's Waste Management Education
               Research Consortium and Westex Labs spoke
               with the class, and students discussed liner
               safety issues and future reclamation plans
               with the landfill director. Class members
               attended city council meetings, and met with a
               community group concerned with the
               landfill's placement. Each student was also
               responsible for providing at least two related
               internet sources, two magazine articles, and
               two library sources to the class.
                  The students synthesized their learning
               through reflective papers. Using computer
               technology, concept maps, and other visual
               aids, they shared their findings and
               recommendations in presentations to their
               classmates, community agencies, and the
               landfill director.
58       Grades  9-12

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       culture. For example, describe ways resource-
       dependent communities (those whose economies
       traditionally relied on activities such as mining or
       timber harvest) work to maintain their identities in the
       face of mine closures or declining timber harvests.
C) Political and economic systems—Learners understand
how different political and economic systems account for,
manage, and affect natural resources and environmental
quality.
    •  Explain the development of economic systems using
       the economic idea of scarcity and the geographic idea
       of uneven distribution of resources.
    •  Compare the U.S. political and economic systems with
       other types of systems, focusing on how the systems
       govern the use of natural resources, control production
       and consumption, and protect environmental quality.

    •  Evaluate the environmental and societal costs and
       benefits of allocating goods and services in different
       ways (e.g. through public or private sectors). For
       example, explain problems such as over-fishing, over-
       grazing, and deforestation considering what can
       happen to resources that are commonly owned and
       openly accessible. Or examine successful common
       property management systems that promote
       sustainable use of resources.
    •  Explain current and historical environmental issues in
       terms of political and economic ideas. For example,
       analyze the role of private property rights and the
       concept of general welfare in shaping decisions  about
       the use and protection of wetlands in the United
       States.
    •  Evaluate the structure and functions of the United
       Nations and its agencies in addressing global
       environmental issues.
D) Global connections—Learners are able to analyze global
social, cultural, political, economic, and environmental
linkages.

    •  Explain regional and national economic specialization
       and international trade in terms of uneven distribution
       of resources and differing costs of producing similar
       goods (due to factors such as climate, labor costs, and
       energy costs).

    •  Describe global connections in systems such as the
       economy, transportation, and communication.
Civics and Government 96-98,
    110-120
Economics 5-7, 19-20, 30-33
Geography 206-207, 210- 211
Science Benchmarks 170
Social Studies 127-131
Civics and Government 121-126
Economics 11-12
Geography 206-207, 210- 211
Science Benchmarks 178
Social Studies 136-138
                                                             Grades 9-12       59

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Economics 19-20
Geography 210-211
Science Benchmarks 163, 166,
    173
Social Studies 124-129
       Evaluate the effects of changes in these systems on
       communities and the environment on a global scale.
       Consider instances in which global linkages are
       strong, and in which they are relatively weak.

   •   Evaluate the connections among interests, decisions,
       and actions taken at the individual, community,
       regional, national, and global levels. Consider their
       effect on global issues such as human rights, economic
       development, health, resource allocation, and
       environmental quality. For example, examine the
       influence of factors such as consumer preferences,
       U.S. foreign policy, international treaties and
       governing bodies, international nongovernmental
       organizations, and corporate operations on agricultural
       practices in developing nations.
E) Change and conflict—Learners understand the
functioning of public processes for promoting and managing
change and conflict, and can analyze their effects on the
environment.
   •   Explain how public decision-making about the
       environment takes into account (or fails to account
       for) uneven distribution of, or different types of, costs
       and benefits; future or distant consequences; and
       difficulties assessing the value of certain costs or
       benefits such as ecosystem services or clean air.
   •   Evaluate the role of social, political, and economic
       institutions in the United States in managing change
       and conflict regarding environmental issues. Account
       for the influence of institutions such as the legal
       system and property rights as well as organizations
       such as banks, nonprofit groups, corporations, and
       special interest groups.
   •   Evaluate the conditions and motivations that lead to
       conflict, cooperation, and change among individuals,
       groups, and nations. Look particularly at the effects of
       these forces on the control of natural resources. For
       example, examine the origins and effects of
       international treaties and accords on whaling or
       commercial fishing.
   •   Evaluate various governmental and non-governmental
       strategies for promoting social change. For example,
       trace the strategies used by different groups to reduce
       energy use in the U.S.
60      Grades 9-12

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Strand 2.4—Environment and Society
Guidelines:
A) Human/environment interactions—Learners understand
that humans are able to alter the physical environment to meet
their needs and that there are limits to the ability of the
environment to absorb impacts or meet human needs.
   •   Evaluate ways in which technology has changed
       humans' ability to alter the environment and its
       capacity to support humans and other living
       organisms. Consider technologies that have had
       impacts learners see as positive, as well as negative.
   •   Analyze specific examples of environmental change in
       terms of qualitative and quantitative costs and benefits
       for different groups of people and specific species or
       ecosystems.
   •   Describe factors that limit the physical environment's
       capacity to support particular types of human activity
       such as suburban development, flood control, or
       particular agricultural practices.

   •   Evaluate the cumulative effects of human actions on a
       specific  species or environmental system, such as a
       stream or a watershed.
   •   Use the concepts of carrying capacity and ecological
       footprint to analyze the sustainability of current trends
       in world population growth and natural resource
       consumption.
B) Places—Learners  understand "place"  as humans endowing
a particular part of the Earth with meaning  through their
interactions with that  environment.
   •   Analyze how places change over time as the physical
       environment changes and as human use and
       perceptions change. For example, examine the effects
       of automobiles and the interstate highway system on
       different places.
   •   Explain the importance of places to human identity.
       For example, discuss changes in land use and personal
       and community identity that occur in a rapidly
       growing town or city, or one in which the economy
       has stagnated.

   •   Describe how  regions change over time, examining
       factors such as human migration and population
       change, technological change, environmental
       degradation, and seismic activity.  For example, trace
References to Standards:

Geography 212-215
Science Benchmarks 56-57
Geography 190-196
Social Studies 118-120
                                                            Grades 9-12      61

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                                      the causes of the desiccation of the Aral Sea and the
                                      changes it has prompted in that region of Russia.
	    C) Resources—Learners understand that the importance and
 Geography 190-196               use of resources change over time and vary under different
 Science 198                                 ,    ,   .,   .   ,
                               economic and technological systems.
                                   •   Explain differences in the consumption of resources
                                      among  nations using factors such as population size,
                                      cultural practices, and varied geographic or economic
                                      distribution of resources.
                                   •   Describe how changes in technology alter the use of
                                      resources. Illustrate with examples such as the ability
                                      to harvest timber on steep slopes using helicopters or
                                      building technologies that incorporate nontraditional
                                      or recycled materials.

                                   •   Evaluate public policies related to resource use.
                                      Consider variables  such as their impacts on the
                                      resource and short- and long-term economic effects.
                                      For example, anticipate the relationship between water
                                      use and the growth of a city like Las Vegas, Nevada,
                                      which is in a desert area that receives only four inches
                                      of rainfall per year.

                                   •   Identify ways in which various resources can be
                                      recycled and reused. Evaluate the viability of
                                      recycling based on  economic and technological
                                      factors, spatial variables such as distance from
                                      recycling facility to markets, and possible future
                                      developments.  For example, discuss factors that
                                      influenced the development of the steel or plastics
                                      recycling industry in the United States.
	    D) Technology—Learners are able to examine the social and
 Social Studies 132-135             environmental  impacts of various technologies and
 Science 199                     ,  ,   ,   .  ,    f                      °
 Science Benchmarks 56-57, 186,      technological systems.
    190-191,195,198-199,203,          .   Explain how social and economic forces influence the
    207
                                      direction of technological development, and how
                                      technologies shape societal values and beliefs. For
                                      example, consider the ability to build large dams for
                                      water storage or hydropower, or the social impact of
                                      the first photos of the Earth from space.

                                   •   Using examples of particular technologies (such as
                                      genetic manipulation or cyanide heap leach gold
                                      mining) or technological systems (such as modern
                                      agriculture or energy production and use), discuss the
                                      social and environmental costs, benefits, risks,  and
                                      possibilities associated with technologies through
                                      which humans shape and control their environment.

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   •   Discuss ways in which technological advances have
       lessened the adverse environmental impacts of human
       activities.
E) Environmental issues—Learners are familiar with a range
of environmental issues at scales that range from local to
national to global. They understand that these scales and
issues are often linked.
   •   Evaluate a range of costs and benefits of particular
       policies that affect the environment. For example,
       consider the effects of free trade agreements on the
       ability of signatory nations to protect the environment,
       or examine the effects of programs for trading
       "pollution credits" among companies.
   •   Place local issues in the context of broader or larger-
       scale issues, drawing parallels,  and noting important
       similarities and differences. Use the broader issue to
       point to important local dynamics or perspectives of
       which to be aware. For example, consider local air
       pollution problems in the context of larger issues such
       as global climate change or acid precipitation in other
       parts of the country.
   •   Identify links among issues, for example the
       relationships among traffic congestion, poor air
       quality, and suburban sprawl. Explain key
       relationships among technological, social, ecological,
       economic, and other aspects of issues.
Economics 30-34
Geography 221-222
Strand 3—
Skills for Understanding and Addressing
Environmental Issues
Strand 3.1 —Skills for Analyzing and Investigating
Environmental Issues
Guidelines:
A) Identifying and investigating issues—Learners apply
their research and analytical skills to investigate
environmental issues ranging from local issues to those that
are regional or global in scope.
   •   Define and clearly articulate issues to be investigated.
       Characterize the issue considering factors such as
       connections with other issues, the pervasiveness of its
References to Standards:

Geography 203-205, 210-211,
   219-220
History 68-70
Social Studies 118-120, 139-141
                                                           Grades 9-12      63

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                                     effects, whether it is a long-term issue or one that is
                                     motivated by a sudden change or crisis, and whether it
                                     is unique to a particular area.

                                  •   Identify key individuals and groups involved. Identify
                                     different perspectives on the issue and approaches to
                                     resolving it. Discuss assumptions and goals that
                                     underlie each position.

                                  •   Examine contextual elements that shape the issue and
                                     alternative courses of action. Use these to identify
                                     relevant historical antecedents or contemporary
                                     parallels to the selected issue. For example, in
                                     studying questions surrounding the preservation of
                                     natural areas in Central America, students may look
                                     for similar issues in other developing nations, regions
                                     where people maintain traditional or subsistence uses
                                     of the land, or areas with similar governmental
                                     regimes.
                                  •   Investigate the issue as well as similar issues and
                                     proposals using secondary sources of information.

                                  •   Where needed, conduct original research, applying
                                     research methods from the natural and social sciences.
                                     For example, survey a community about an
                                     environmental issue using a random sample or test
                                     soils for the presence of contaminants.
                              B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—Learners are
Geography 212-222               ^jg to evaiuate the consequences of specific environmental
           118-120             changes, conditions, and issues for human and ecological
                              systems.
                                  •   Evaluate the consequences of an environmental issue.
                                     For example, bring to bear historical perspectives, an
                                     understanding of the impacts of different technological
                                     developments, and knowledge of similar issues.
                                  •   Discuss the social, political, economic, and ethical
                                     implications of environmental issues. For example,
                                     trace the root causes of a community's solid waste
                                     problem and the effects of the problem and likely
                                     consequences of siting a landfill in different areas  for
                                     different groups of people.

                                  •   Project the likely consequences for specific human and
                                     environmental systems of failure to resolve the issue.

                                  •   Use the idea of cumulative effects to explain why one
                                     set of environmental changes or human actions cannot
                                     be considered in isolation from others.
64       Grades 9-12

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C) Identifying and evaluating alternative solutions and
courses of action—Learners are able to identify and propose
action strategies that are likely to be effective in particular
situations and for particular purposes.
    •   Synthesize different perspectives, types of data, and
       means of analysis to propose solutions to
       environmental issues.

    •   Apply knowledge of functional relationships,
       modeling, and statistical analysis to evaluating issues
       and different approaches to resolving them. For
       example, do basic traffic flow analyses to project the
       likely affects of commercial developments at the
       outskirts of town and evaluate alternative solutions
       such as widening roads, providing bus service, or
       changing the location of the development. Predict
       other likely consequences of different approaches to
       resolving projected traffic problems associated with
       the new stores.
    •   Evaluate proposed solutions using gauges such as
       likely impacts on society or the environment and
       likely effectiveness in resolving the issue. Use
       methods such as cost/benefit analysis, cumulative
       effects analysis, environmental impact analysis, ethical
       analysis, and risk analysis. Describe the strengths and
       weaknesses of each method, considering the main
       ideas behind each approach including which effects
       are important to look at and which values or societal
       goals it tries to protect.

    •   Define and provide examples of citizen action
       appropriate to proposed solutions.
D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and openness—
While environmental issues investigations can bring to the
surface deeply held views, learners are able to engage each
other  in peer review conducted in the spirit of open inquiry.
    •   Question, offer alternative explanations, and defend
       interpretations in group discussions.
    •   Understand and explain the importance of such
       characteristics as honesty, openness, skepticism, and
       suspending judgment in the process of building
       knowledge.

    •   Discuss when and how characteristics such as
       openness and decisiveness are valuable in addressing
       environmental issues.
English Language Arts 41
History 70
Mathematics 324
Science Benchmarks 230
Social Studies 139-141
English Language Arts 31-33, 40-
    42,44^5
Mathematics 348
Science 173-176
Science Benchmarks 287
                                                              Grades 9-12      65

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    Reducing Risk in Your School
    or Community
    From: Exploring Environmental Issues: Focus on Risk,
    Project Learning Tree, Washington, D.C.
    Grade Level: High School
                            Correlating Guidelines:
                            Strand 1 A, B, C, D, E,
                               F,G
                            Strand 2.3 A, B, C, D, E
                            Strand 2.4 A, B, C, D, E
                            Strand 3.1 A, B, C, D
                            Strand 3.2 A, B, C, D
                            Strand 4 A, B, C, D
   This activity is the last in a module designed to
   help students leam the rationale for and the
   mechanics of risk assessment, risk
   management, and risk communication.
   Through additional activities carried out during
   the semester, students study statistical models,
   principles of uncertainty, toxicity testing, and
   variability to form a basis for their
   understanding of risk. They use these tools to
   measure risk in their own lives, such as
   exposure to radon or the chance of losing a
   term paper to a lightning strike. They also
   study examples of environmental risk
   assessment and cost benefit analysis.
       In this culminating activity, students apply
   the knowledge and skills acquired from earlier
   activities as they identify a risk in their school
   or community, develop a plan to assess the
   risk, decide the best way to reduce the risk,
   educate others, and, if feasible, implement their
   plan.
                  Students list known risks present in their
               school or community—these may vary from a
               loose step to poor air circulation to habitat
               destruction. They choose one risk to explore
               in depth and develop a plan to reduce
               exposure to the risk. This includes:
               characterizing the risks (identifying the
               source, the exposed population, the extent of
               exposure, and expected adverse consequences
               of exposure); identifying specific goals and
               the amount of reduction to be achieved;
               measuring the uncertainty involved; and
               balancing different viewpoints and opinions.
               Additionally, class members estimate the cost
               of their plan; identify individuals who would
               be involved; estimate a realistic time frame;
               and develop methods for informing the public
               of the risk and of the benefits of their solution.
                  If feasible, students implement their plan
               and determine how and when to evaluate its
               effectiveness.
                               Strand 3.2—Decision-Making and Citizenship Skills
References to Standards:

Geography 219-222
History 70
Social Studies 121-123
Geography 55
Guidelines:
A) Forming and evaluating personal views—Learners are
able to communicate, evaluate, and justify their own views on
environmental issues and alternative ways to address them.
    •  Articulate a position on an environmental issue.
       Justify the position based on an analysis of
       information from a variety of sources, personal beliefs
       and values, and clear reasoning.
    •  Evaluate personal beliefs and values using criteria
       such as personal wellbeing; social and environmental
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       welfare; economic vitality; and concern for other
       living beings.
    •   Articulate elements of their own environmental ethic
       and discuss whether personal positions on issues are
       consistent with this ethic.
    •   Consider viewpoints that differ from their own, and
       information that challenges their position. Evaluate
       whether and how such information might affect their
       views.
B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—Learners are
able to decide whether action is needed in particular situations
and whether they should be involved.
    •   Evaluate whether action is warranted in specific
       situations, accounting for factors such as available
       evidence about the issue and proposed solutions; the
       scale of the issue; legal, social, economic, and
       ecological consequences; and alternatives to citizen
       action.
    •   Evaluate whether personal involvement in particular
       actions is warranted, considering factors such as their
       own values, skills, resources, and commitment.
    •   Communicate decisions clearly, articulating well-
       reasoned arguments supporting their views and
       decisions.
C) Planning and taking action—Learners know how to plan
for action based on their research and analysis of an
environmental issue. If appropriate, they take actions that are
within the scope of their rights and consistent with their
abilities and responsibilities as citizens.
    •   Develop plans for individual and collective action
       involving groups such as a small group of classmates,
       a school club, a community organization, or a church.
       Include clear reasons and goals for action. In planning,
       refer to their knowledge of a range of citizen action
       strategies and the results of their environmental issue
       investigations.
    •   Develop action plans based on an understanding of the
       complexity of the issue. Set realistic goals and include
       measures of success consistent with their abilities and
       the capacities of the groups involved.

    •   Decide whether their plan should be implemented
       immediately or at another time, modified, or
       abandoned; and carry through with action when
       appropriate.
Civics and Government 128-132
Social Studies 139-141
History 70
                                                              Grades 9-12      67

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	    D) Evaluating the results of actions—Learners are able to
 Social Studies 139-141             evaluate the effects of their own actions and actions taken by
                               other individuals and groups.

                                  •  Discuss the intended and unintended effects of
                                     citizen actions on specific environmental issues.
                                     Consider the apparent effects of citizen action on the
                                     environment, the political situation, and the
                                     individuals involved. Illustrate with examples such
                                     as a demonstration at a nuclear test facility, a local
                                     watershed festival, or a citizen lobbying effort
                                     against proposed environmental regulations.
                                  •  Analyze their own actions, evaluating apparent
                                     effects in terms of learners' goals, ethics, and broader
                                     societal goals.  Develop a "lessons learned" document
                                     or presentation.

                                  •  Account for some of the difficulties they encounter
                                     in evaluating the results of their actions.
                               Strand 4—

                               Personal and Civic Responsibility


 References to Standards:     Guidelines:
~T.    ~        t ,Ae ,„       A) Understanding societal values and principles—
 Civics and Government 105-109        '      ,    .  & ,     ,    ,   •  r,       /,    ,   ,
 Economics 19-20                  Learners know how to analyze the influence of shared and
 English Language Arts 44           conflicting societal values.
 Social Studies 124-129, 139-141                                               .
                                  •  Identify shared political values and principles that
                                     unite U.S. citizens and analyze conflicting views
                                     about their meaning and application. For example,
                                     examine conflicting views about how to protect
                                     general welfare and private property rights in a
                                     specific land-use decision where a lawsuit has been
                                     filed alleging a "taking" of private property rights by
                                     the government.
                                     Analyze how societal institutions, such as banks,
                                     corporations, nonprofit organizations, lobbying
                                     groups, government agencies, and the courts,
                                     embody and perpetuate certain societal values and
                                     principles.

                                     Describe and suggest ways that individuals can work
                                     to change how societal institutions function and,
                                     consequently, to change their environmental impacts.
 68      Grades 9-12

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B) Recognizing citizens' rights and responsibilities—
Learners understand the importance of exercising the rights
and responsibilities of citizenship.
   •   Evaluate conflicts between individual rights and other
       societal interests such as a healthy environment.
       Discuss when individuals' civic obligations require
       them to subordinate their personal interests or desires
       to the public good.
   •   Explain the importance and evaluate the usefulness of
       civic dispositions such as trust, patience, self-
       discipline, respect, and open-mindedness to
       individuals and to society.
   •   Explain the influence of citizen action and public
       opinion on particular policy decisions that affect the
       environment.
                 Civics and Government 128-137
                 Social Studies 139-141
   The Environmental News
   From: Teaching Naturally, Office of Environmental
   Education, Tallahassee, Florida
   Grade Level: High School
             Correlating Guidelines:
             Strand 1 A, B, C, D, E, G
             Strand 2.2 A, C
             Strand 2.3 A, B, C, E
             Strand 2.4 A, B, C, E
             Strand 3.1 A, B, D
             Strand 4 A, B, C
    A high school journalism class published a
    series of articles about the environment for
    their own and other student newspapers
    throughout Florida. The students researched
    and wrote articles about local, state, and
    national environmental issues. In composing
    their articles, students practiced elements of the
    writing process, such as prewriting, drafting,
    and editing documents. Students gathered
    information from a variety of print and
    electronic media. In addition to developing
    skills in language arts and small group work,
    the science and social studies teachers worked
    on related learning objectives in their
    respective disciplines.
       In  one instance, students researched and
    wrote articles describing laws affecting water
    quality and their effects on local industry.
    Using investigative reporting techniques such
    as interviewing and library research, students
    learned about the cycles of seasonal rainfall
and nutrients that affect Florida Bay's water
composition, the laws guiding government
agency decisions concerning freshwater flow
to the Bay, and how the Bay's water quality in
turn affects the businesses associated with the
tourist industry. In addition to writing and
researching,  students used the school's
computers to design headlines and sidebars,
and insert photos and captions.
   A student-produced news broadcast for the
school's closed circuit television channel
allowed the journalism students to record and
air public service announcements about their
articles.
   The project was partially funded by a grant
from the Florida Advisory Council on
Environmental Education.
                                                                Grades 9-12       69

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                                  •   Reflect on the impact of citizen participation—
                                      particularly learners' own—on public concerns related
                                      to the environment and on the community.
	    C) Recognizing efficacy—Learners possess a realistic self-
 Social Studies 124-126             confidence in their effectiveness as citizens.

                                  •   Evaluate the extent to which individual and group
                                      action creates change, meets individual needs, and
                                      promotes the common good.
                                  •   Identify ways in which learners, individually and
                                      collectively, are able to help maintain environmental
                                      quality and resolve problems and issues. Provide
                                      examples from the range of communities (e.g., family,
                                      club or group, school, town, state, nation, world) in
                                      which learners  see themselves as members.
	    D) Accepting personal responsibility—Learners understand
 Civics and Government 131-132      ^ ^^ ^^ C{m haye broad consequences and accept
                               responsibility for recognizing those effects and changing their
                               actions when necessary.

                                  •   Evaluate the effects of their actions (and the actions of
                                      the larger social groups of which they are part) on the
                                      environment, other humans, and other living things.

                                  •   Explain ways in which the decisions of one generation
                                      create opportunities and impose constraints for future
                                      generations. Illustrate this idea with examples from the
                                      past, and incorporate it into their analyses of issues.
                                  •   Evaluate the importance of fulfilling personal
                                      responsibilities for themselves, society, and the
                                      environment.
                                  •   Demonstrate a willingness to work individually and
                                      collectively toward the resolution of environmental
                                      issues and to participate thoughtfully and effectively in
                                      environmental decision-making.
 70      Grades 9-12

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APPENDIX A
EXECUTIVE  SUMMARY
                   The Executive Summary can be used as an easy reference to
                   Excellence in Environmental Education—Guidelines for Learning
                   (Pre K-12) (NAAEE 2004). The Executive Summary is organized
                   into four strands, each of which is further delineated by a set of
                   guidelines that describe a level of skill or knowledge appropriate for
                   each of three grade levels—fourth, eighth, and twelfth. Guidelines for
                   a particular strand are arranged on two page layouts so that the user
                   can quickly understand the flow of guidelines at a grade level or
                   compare how guidelines progress across the grade levels.
                                                 Appendix A    71

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OVERVIEW
FOURTH GRADE
                                           Learners should be able to meet the
                                           guidelines included in this section by the end
                                           of fourth grade.

                                           The pre kindergarten through fourth grade
                                           years are a time of tremendous cognitive
                                           development. By third and fourth grades,
                                           learners have developed some basic skills
                                           that help them construct knowledge.
                                           Instructors in earlier grade levels should use
                                           these fourth grade guidelines as a target,
                                           extrapolating from this end goal appropriate
                                           activities and lessons for younger learners.

                                           In these early years of formal education,
                                           learners tend to be concrete thinkers with a
                                           natural curiosity about the world around
                                           them. Environmental education can build on
                                           these characteristics by focusing on
                                           observation and exploration of the
                                           environment—beginning close to home.
72       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
Learners should be able to meet the
guidelines included in this section by the end
of eighth grade.

In the fifth through eighth grades, learners
begin to develop skills in abstract thinking
and continue to develop creative thinking
skills—and along with these, the  ability to
understand the interplay of environmental
and human social systems in greater depth.
Environmental education can foster this
development by focusing on investigation of
local environmental systems, problems, and
issues. As  learners become actively engaged
in deciding for themselves what is right and
wrong, educators can use environmental
problems to help learners explore their own
responsibilities and ethics.
Learners should be able to meet the
guidelines included in this section by the time
they graduate from high school.

By the end of twelfth grade, learners are well
on their way to environmental literacy. They
should possess the basic skills and
dispositions they need to understand and act
on environmental problems and issues as
responsible citizens—and to continue the
learning process throughout their lives. In the
ninth through twelfth grades, environmental
education can promote active and responsible
citizenship by challenging learners to hone
and apply problem-solving, analysis,
persuasive communication, and other higher
level skills—often in real-world contexts.
                                                           Appendix A      73

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STRAND 1 -
Questioning, Analysis,
and Interpretation Skills
FOURTH GRADE
                                          A) Questioning—Learners are able to
                                          develop questions that help them learn about
                                          the environment and do simple
                                          investigations.
                                          B) Designing investigations—Learners are
                                          able to design simple investigations.
                                          C) Collecting information—Learners are
                                          able to locate and collect information about
                                          the environment and environmental topics.
                                          D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—
                                          Learners understand the need to use reliable
                                          information to answer their questions. They
                                          are familiar with some basic factors to
                                          consider in judging the merits of information.

                                          E) Organizing information—Learners are
                                          able to describe data and organize
                                          information to search for relationships and
                                          patterns concerning the environment and
                                          environmental topics.

                                          F) Working with models and simulations—
                                          Learners understand that relationships,
                                          patterns, and processes can be represented by
                                          models.

                                          G) Drawing conclusions and developing
                                          explanations—Learners can develop simple
                                          explanations that address their questions
                                          about the environment.
74       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Questioning—Learners are able to
develop questions that help them learn about
the environment and do simple
investigations.
B) Designing investigations—Learners are
able to design simple investigations.
C) Collecting information—Learners are
able to locate and collect information about
the environment and environmental topics.
D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—
Learners understand the need to use reliable
information to answer their questions. They
are familiar with some basic  factors to
consider in judging the merits of information.

E) Organizing information—Learners are
able to describe data and organize
information to search for relationships and
patterns concerning the environment and
environmental topics.

F) Working with models and simulations-
Learners understand that relationships,
patterns, and processes can be represented by
models.

G) Drawing conclusions and developing
explanations—Learners can develop simple
explanations that address their questions
about the environment.
A) Questioning—Learners are able to
develop, modify, clarify, and explain
questions that guide environmental
investigations of various types. They
understand factors that influence the
questions they pose.

B) Designing investigations—Learners
know how to design investigations to answer
particular questions about the environment.
They are able to develop approaches for
investigating unfamiliar types of problems
and phenomena.

C) Collecting information—Learners are
able to locate  and collect reliable information
for environmental investigations of many
types. They know how to use sophisticated
technology to collect information,  including
computer programs that access, gather, store,
and display data.

D) Evaluating accuracy and reliability—
Learners can apply basic logic and reasoning
skills to evaluate completeness and reliability
in a variety of information sources.
E) Organizing information—Learners are
able to organize and display information in
ways appropriate to different types of
environmental investigations and purposes.
F) Working with models and simulations-
Learners are able to create, use, and evaluate
models to understand environmental
phenomena.

G) Drawing conclusions and developing
explanations—Learners are able to use
evidence and logic in developing proposed
explanations that address their initial
questions and hypotheses.
                                                           Appendix A     75

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STRAND 2-
Knowledge of Environmental Processes
and Systems
         FOURTH GRADE
STRAND 2.1 -
The Earth as
a Physical System
STRAND 2.2-
The Living Environment
A) Processes that shape the Earth—
Learners are able to identify changes and
differences in the physical environment.
                                         B) Changes in matter—Learners are able to
                                         identify basic characteristics of and changes
                                         in matter.
                                         C) Energy—While they may have little
                                         understanding of formal concepts associated
                                         with energy, learners are familiar with the
                                         basic behavior of some different forms of
                                         energy.
A) Organisms, populations, and
communities—Learners understand basic
similarities and differences among a wide
variety of living organisms. They understand
the concept of habitat.

B) Heredity and evolution—Learners
understand that plants and animals have
different characteristics and that many of the
characteristics are inherited.

C) Systems and connections—Learners
understand basic ways in which organisms
are related to their environments and to other
organisms.

D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners
know that living things need some source of
energy to live and grow.
76       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Processes that shape the Earth—
Learners have a basic understanding of most
of the physical processes that shape the Earth.
They are able to explore the origin of
differences in physical patterns.
B) Changes in matter—Learners understand
the properties of the substances that make up
objects or materials found in the
environment.

C) Energy—Learners begin to grasp formal
concepts related to energy by focusing on
energy transfer and transformations. They are
able to make connections among phenomena
such as light, heat, magnetism, electricity,
and the motion of objects.
A) Organisms, populations, and
communities—Learners understand that
biotic communities are made up of plants and
animals that are adapted to live in particular
environments.

B) Heredity and evolution—Learners have
a basic understanding of the importance of
genetic heritage.
C) Systems and connections—Learners
understand major kinds of interactions among
organisms or populations of organisms.
D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners
understand how energy and matter flow
among the abiotic and biotic components of
the environment.
A) Processes that shape the Earth—
Learners understand the major physical
processes that shape the Earth. They can
relate these processes, especially those that
are large-scale and long-term, to
characteristics of the Earth.

B) Changes in matter—Learners apply their
understanding of chemical reactions to round
out their explanations of environmental
characteristics and everyday phenomena.

C) Energy—Learners apply their knowledge
of energy and matter to understand
phenomena in the world around them.
A) Organisms, populations, and
communities—Learners understand basic
population dynamics and the importance of
diversity in living systems.
B) Heredity and evolution—Learners
understand the basic ideas and genetic
mechanisms behind biological evolution.
C) Systems and connections—Learners
understand the living environment to be
comprised of interrelated, dynamic systems.
D) Flow of matter and energy—Learners
are able to account for environmental
characteristics based on their knowledge of
how matter and energy interact in living
systems.
                                                          Appendix A     77

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STRAND 2-
Knowledge of Environmental
Processes and Systems
         FOURTH GRADE
STRAND 2.3-
Humans and Their Societies
A) Individuals and groups—Learners
understand that people act as individuals and
as group members and that groups can
influence individual actions.
                                         B) Culture—Learners understand that
                                         experiences and places may be interpreted
                                         differently by people with different cultural
                                         backgrounds, at different times, or with other
                                         frames of reference.

                                         C) Political and economic systems—
                                         Learners understand that government and
                                         economic systems exist because people
                                         living together in groups need ways to do
                                         things such as provide for needs and wants,
                                         maintain order, and manage conflict.

                                         D) Global connections—Learners
                                         understand how people are connected at
                                         many levels—including the global level—by
                                         actions and common responsibilities that
                                         concern the environment.

                                         E) Change and conflict—Learners
                                         recognize that change is a normal part of
                                         individual and societal life. They understand
                                         that conflict is rooted in different points of
                                         view.
78       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Individuals and groups—Learners
understand that how individuals perceive
the environment is influenced in part by indi-
vidual traits and group membership or affilia-
tion.

B) Culture—As they become familiar with
a wider range of cultures and subcultures,
learners gain an understanding of cultural
perspectives on the environment and how the
environment may, in turn, influence culture.

C) Political and economic systems—
Learners become more familiar with political
and economic systems and how these systems
take the environment into consideration.
D) Global connections—Learners become
familiar with ways in which the world's envi-
ronmental, social, economic, cultural,  and
political systems are linked.
E) Change and conflict—Learners under-
stand that human social systems change over
time and that conflicts sometimes arise over
differing and changing viewpoints about the
environment.
A) Individuals and groups—Learners
understand the influence of individual and
group actions on the environment, and how
groups can work to promote and balance
interests.

B) Culture—Learners understand cultural
perspectives and dynamics and apply their
understanding in context.
C) Political and economic systems—
Learners understand how different political
and economic systems account for, manage,
and affect natural resources and
environmental quality.
D) Global connections—Learners are able
to analyze global, social, cultural, political,
economic, and environmental linkages.
E) Change and conflict—Learners
understand the functioning of public
processes for promoting and managing
change and conflict, and can analyze their
effects on the environment.
                                                          Appendix A     79

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STRAND 2-
Knowledge of Environmental
Processes and Systems
        FOURTH GRADE
STRAND 2.4-
Environment and Society
80      Appendix A
A) Human/environment interactions—
Learners understand that people depend on,
change, and are affected by the environment.
                                        B) Places—Learners understand that places
                                        differ in their physical and human
                                        characteristics.
                                        C) Resources—Learners understand the
                                        basic concepts of resource and resource
                                        distribution.
                                        D) Technology—Learners understand that
                                        technology is an integral part of human
                                        existence and culture.
                                        E) Environmental issues—Learners are
                                        familiar with some local environmental
                                        issues and understand that people in other
                                        places experience environmental issues as
                                        well.

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Human/environment interactions—
Learners understand that human-caused
changes have consequences for the
immediate environment as well as for other
places and future times.
B) Places—Learners begin to explore the
meaning of places both close to home and
around the world.
C) Resources—Learners understand that
uneven distribution of resources influences
their use and perceived value.
D) Technology—Learners understand
the human ability to shape and control the
environment as a function of the capacities
for creating knowledge and developing new
technologies.

E) Environmental issues—Learners are
familiar with a range of environmental issues
at scales that range from local to national to
global. They understand that people in other
places around the world experience
environmental issues similar to the ones they
are concerned about locally.
A) Human/environment interactions—
Learners understand that humans are able to
alter the physical environment to meet their
needs and that there are limits to the ability
of the environment to absorb impacts or meet
human needs.

B) Places—Learners understand "place" as
humans endowing a particular part of the
Earth with meaning through their interactions
with that environment.

C) Resources—Learners understand that the
importance and use of resources change over
time and vary under different economic and
technological systems.

D) Technology—Learners are able to
examine the social and environmental
impacts of various technologies and
technological systems.
E) Environmental issues—Learners are
familiar with a range of environmental issues
at scales that range from local to national to
global. They understand that these scales and
issues are often linked.
                                                          Appendix A     81

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STRAND 3-
Skills for Understanding and Addressing
Environmental Issues
         FOURTH GRADE
STRAND 3.1 -
Skills for Analyzing and Investigating
Environmental Issues
A) Identifying and investigating issues—
Learners are able to identify and investigate
issues in their local environments and
communities.
                                        B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—
                                        As learners come to understand that
                                        environmental and social phenomena are
                                        linked, they are able to explore the
                                        consequences of issues.

                                        C) Identifying and evaluating alternative
                                        solutions and courses of action—Learners
                                        understand there are many approaches to
                                        resolving issues.
                                        D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and
                                        openness—Learners understand the
                                        importance of sharing ideas and hearing other
                                        points of view.
82       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
         TWELFTH GRADE
A) Identifying and investigating issues—
Learners are able to use primary and
secondary sources of information, and apply
growing research and analytical skills, to
investigate environmental issues, beginning
in their own community.

B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—
Learners are able to apply their knowledge of
ecological and human processes and systems
to identify the consequences of specific
environmental issues.

C) Identifying and evaluating alternative
solutions and courses of action—Learners
are able to identify and develop action
strategies for addressing particular issues.
D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and
openness—Learners are able to consider the
assumptions and interpretations that influence
the conclusions they and others draw about
environmental issues.
A) Identifying and investigating issues—
Learners apply their research and analytical
skills to investigate environmental issues
ranging from local issues to those that are
regional or global in scope.
B) Sorting out the consequences of issues—
Learners are able to evaluate the
consequences of specific environmental
changes, conditions, and issues for human
and ecological systems.

C) Identifying and evaluating alternative
solutions and courses of action—Learners
are able to identify and propose action
strategies that are likely to be effective in
particular situations and for particular
purposes.

D) Working with flexibility, creativity, and
openness—While environmental issues
investigations can bring to the surface deeply
held views, learners are able to engage each
other in peer review conducted in the spirit of
open inquiry.
                                                           Appendix A     83

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STRAND 3-
Skills for Understanding and Addressing
Environmental Issues
         FOURTH GRADE
STRAND 3.2-
Decision-Making and Citizenship Skills
84       Appendix A
A) Forming and evaluating personal
views—Learners are able to identify, justify,
and clarify their views on environmental
issues and alternative ways to address them.
                                         B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—
                                         Learners are able to think critically about
                                         whether they believe action is needed in
                                         particular situations and whether they believe
                                         they should be involved.

                                         C) Planning and taking action—By
                                         participating in issues of their choosing—
                                         mostly close to home—they learn the basics
                                         of individual and collective action.
                                         D) Evaluating the results of actions—
                                         Learners understand that civic actions have
                                         consequences.

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Forming and evaluating personal
views—Learners are able to identify, justify,
and clarify their views on environmental
issues and alternative ways to address them.
B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—
Learners are able to evaluate whether they
believe action is needed in particular
situations, and decide whether they should be
involved.

C) Planning and taking action—As learners
begin to see themselves as citizens taking
active roles in their communities, they are
able to plan for and engage in citizen action
at levels appropriate to their maturity and
preparation.
D) Evaluating the results of actions—
Learners are able to analyze the effects of
their own actions and actions taken by other
individuals and groups.
A) Forming and evaluating personal
views—Learners are able to communicate,
evaluate, and justify their own views on
environmental issues and alternative ways
to address them.

B) Evaluating the need for citizen action—
Learners are able to decide whether action is
needed in particular situations and whether
they should be involved.
C) Planning and taking action—Learners
know how to plan for action based on their
research and analysis of an environmental
issue. If appropriate, they take actions that are
within the scope of their rights and consistent
with their abilities and responsibilities as
citizens.

D) Evaluating the results of actions—
Learners are able to evaluate the effects of
their own actions and actions taken by other
individuals and groups
                                                          Appendix A      85

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STRAND 4-
Personal and Civic Responsibility
FOURTH GRADE
                                          A) Understanding societal values and
                                          principles—Learners can identify
                                          fundamental principles of U.S. society and
                                          explain their importance in the context of
                                          environmental issues.

                                          B) Recognizing citizens' rights and
                                          responsibilities—Learners understand the
                                          basic rights and responsibilities of
                                          citizenship.
                                          C) Recognizing efficacy—Learners possess
                                          a realistic self-confidence in their
                                          effectiveness as citizens.

                                          D) Accepting personal responsibility—
                                          Learners understand that they have
                                          responsibility for the effects of their actions.
86       Appendix A

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          EIGHTH GRADE
        TWELFTH GRADE
A) Understanding societal values and
principles—Learners understand that societal
values can be both a unifying and a divisive
force.
B) Recognizing citizens' rights and
responsibilities—Learners understand the
rights and responsibilities of citizenship and
their importance in promoting the resolution
of environmental issues.

C) Recognizing efficacy—Learners possess
a realistic self-confidence in their
effectiveness as citizens.

D) Accepting personal responsibility—
Learners understand that their actions can
have broad consequences and that they are
responsible for those consequences.
A) Understanding societal values and
principles—Learners know how to analyze
the influence of shared and conflicting
societal values.
B) Recognizing citizens' rights and
responsibilities—Learners understand the
importance of exercising the rights and
responsibilities of citizenship.
C) Recognizing efficacy—Learners possess
a realistic self-confidence in their
effectiveness as citizens.

D) Accepting personal responsibility—
Learners understand that their actions can
have broad consequences and accept
responsibility for recognizing those effects
and changing their actions when necessary.
                                                          Appendix A     87

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APPENDIX B:

BACKGROUND FOR THE DEVELOPMENT

OF THE LEARNER GUIDELINES

FRAMEWORK

                       The Learner Guidelines in Context
                       The National Project for Excellence in Environmental
                       Education, sponsored by the North American Association for
                       Environmental Education (NAAEE), was initiated in 1993. In
                       facilitating the development of a model set of guidelines for
                       environmental education, it joins standards projects for such
                       disciplines as Mathematics, English Language Arts,
                       Geography, Science, Civics, and History developed in response
                       to the national "Goals 2000" process. The first purpose of
                       Guidelines for Learning is to serve the field of environmental
                       education by articulating knowledge and skills essential for
                       environmental literacy. These guidelines also demonstrate the
                       essential link between environmental education and the
                       traditional disciplines and to broader efforts for education
                       reform.
                       Education Reform

                       the Standards Development Movement
                       The current push toward education reform in the U.S. was
                       heralded by the 1983 publication of A Nation at Risk. This
                       report pointed to declining test scores, poorly prepared high
                       school graduates, declining enrollment in science and
                       mathematics, low academic achievement in comparison to
                       many European and Japanese students, and low levels of
                       literacy—and raised significant questions concerning the
                       quality of the American education system. Following the
                       publication of A Nation at Risk, it became common to call into
                       question the very structure of American education.

                          A decade-long move toward national education reform
                       received its highest level of governmental recognition at the
                       1989 national education summit in Charlottesville. At the
                       summit, a bipartisan group of the nation's governors and the
                       Bush White House agreed to national goals for education.
                       These broadly formulated goals set out an agenda for education
                       for the year 2000. With the 1994 passage of the "Goals 2000:
                       Educate America Act," the eight goals became official national


88      Appendix B

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policy, guiding numerous activities within and outside the
federal government.
   Of particular importance for developing environmental
education guidelines are:
       Goal 3—Student Achievement and
       Citizenship, which states that "by the year
       2000 American students will leave grades four,
       eight, and twelve having demonstrated
       competency in challenging subject matter,
       including English, mathematics, science,
       history, and geography; and every school in
       America will ensure that all students learn to
       use their minds well, so they may be prepared
       for responsible citizenship, further learning,
       and productive employment in our modern
       economy."
       Goal 4—Science and Mathematics, which
       states that "by the year 2000, U.S. students will
       be first in the world in science and
       mathematics achievement."
   Both Goal 3 and Goal 4 set the stage for developing a
range of voluntary national standards for the core disciplines.
(See page 8 for a sampling of these standards documents.)
These voluntary standards have been designed to provide state
and local education leaders guidance in generating locally
appropriate academic benchmarks.
Building from a Rich History
Guidelines for Learning has been developed with the input of
literally thousands of teachers, school administrators,
environmental educators, scientists, and parents, as well as
from a variety of professional organizations and government
agencies. From the inception of the project, the guidelines
have used existing environmental education frameworks,
definitions, and models as a foundation. The field as a whole
owes a great deal to those who have worked to create these
documents. Each document is based on a different set of
assumptions and priorities, yet the commonalities are
considerable. These commonalities, in essence, define the
practice of environmental education and provide the basis for
the structure of Guidelines for Learning.
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                              Developing a Framework for the Guidelines
                              Much of the work in environmental education has been
                              guided by the Belgrade Charter (UNESCO-UNEP, 1976) and
                              the Tbilisi Declaration (UNESCO, 1978). These two
                              documents furnish an internationally accepted blueprint for
                              environmental education. The Tbilisi Declaration outlined
                              five categories of objectives for environmental education:

                                 •  Awareness—to help social groups and individuals
                                    acquire an awareness and sensitivity to the total
                                    environment and its allied problems.
                                 •  Knowledge—to help social groups and individuals
                                    gain a variety of experience in, and acquire a basic
                                    understanding of, the environment and its associated
                                    problems.

                                 •  Attitudes—to help social groups and individuals
                                    acquire a set of values  and feelings of concern for the
                                    environment and the motivation for actively
                                    participating in environmental improvement and
                                    protection.

                                 •  Skills—to help social groups and individuals acquire
                                    the skills for identifying and solving environmental
                                    problems.
                                 •  Participation—to provide social groups and
                                    individuals with an opportunity to be actively involved
                                    at all levels in working toward resolution of
                                    environmental problems.
                                 With the evolution of the field, these guiding principles
                              (as well as the more general ones presented in the introduction
                              to this document) have been researched, critiqued, revisited,
                              and expanded. Guidelines for Learning draws upon these
                              respected founding writings about environmental education
                              and the field's best thinking to date.  This Appendix describes
                              environmental education frameworks developed since Tbilisi
                              as a means of revealing the base on which these Guidelines
                              are built. In the following examination, a number of
                              environmental education frameworks are divided into those:

                                 •  based on research or a  synthesis of the research
                                    literature;

                                 •  created as conceptual frameworks for curricula; and

                                 •  developed as part of previous standards or criteria
                                    development projects.
                                 Each of these frameworks is explored below.  To recreate
                              some of the historical logic of the field, the models are
                              presented in chronological order within each category. Each
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outline is a direct excerpt from the original document. The
terminology used reflects common usage of the time and the
authors' preferences.
Frameworks/Models Based

on EE Literature
The following environmental education frameworks are
excerpted directly from key documents in the environmental
education literature. They provide insight into the evolution of
the field and its core ideas. It becomes clear that, while the
field has continued to mature since the Tbilisi Declaration was
formulated in 1977, the declaration's original intent is still
central to environmental education.
   Although the environmental education model proposed by
Stapp and Cox (1974) predates Tbilisi, it is important to
include here because of the central role it played in the
development of the  Tbilisi Declaration. The work by
Hungerford, et. al. (1980) proposes goal levels for EE
curriculum development. The four goal levels were submitted
to a content validity expert panel to judge their congruence
with the five Tbilisi objectives.
   In recent years, much scholarly work in EE has focused on
describing the precursors of responsible environmental
citizenship and environmental literacy—the types of
knowledge, skills and dispositions that describe the
environmentally literate citizen. The proposed frameworks
offered by lozzi, et.  al. (1990), Marcinkowski (1991),
Wisconsin Center for Environmental Education (1992), Roth
(1992), and the EE Literacy Consortium (1994) are all based
in a synthesis of this research and the EE foundations
literature.
   Finally, the important influence of issues surrounding
sustainable development on EE thinking is considered with
the inclusion of a framework for sustainable development
education published in Canada (1994).
Framework 1
Stapp, W.B. and Cox, D.A. (1974)
Environmental Education Model

Philosophy and Concepts:
An environmental education program should assist the learner
in understanding the basic spaceship earth philosophy which
would serve as an 'umbrella' of thought and ethic for the
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                              entire program. The spaceship earth philosophy has been
                              divided into five basic concepts: ecosystems, population,
                              economics and technology, environmental decisions, and
                              environmental ethics. These concepts encompass the
                              awareness, knowledge, and understanding of the living and
                              non-living world and their complex interactions; the social,
                              economic, political and aesthetic influences of the populations
                              of people; the need for, and processes of decision making; and
                              development of an environmental ethic that would motivate
                              the learner to adopt a life style compatible with environmental
                              quality.
                              The Processes:
                                 A. The Skills of Problem Solving
                                    Since the environmental education model is based on
                                    student involvement, problem solving skills are
                                    essential to developing and carrying out action plans.
                                    ... The eight problem solving skills are:
                                    1.  Recognizing environmental problems
                                    2.  Defining environmental problems
                                    3.  Listening with comprehension
                                    4.  Collecting information
                                    5.  Organizing information
                                    6.  Analyzing information
                                    7.  Generating alternative solutions
                                    8.  Developing a plan of action
                                 B. Clarifying Values
                                    The values clarification approach helps students
                                    become aware of personal beliefs, attitudes, values and
                                    behavior which they prize and are committed to both
                                    in and out of the classroom. This process assists
                                    students in considering alternative solutions and the
                                    implications of each alternative.... Values clarification
                                    is of major importance in making rational
                                    environmental decisions every day of a person's life,
                                    and must be a basic part of every environmental
                                    education program.
                                 C. Community Problem Solving

                                    Students need to be able to apply learned skills in both
                                    valuing and problem solving in an issue that is
                                    meaningful to them—a problem that directly affects
                                    them either at home, or at school, or in the local
                                    community.
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The Teaching-Learning Models:
There is no single teaching model that all students will
respond favorably toward under all circumstances.... It is
important for a teacher to asses his/her personal skills and the
situation and then blend teaching models in an effort to
achieve the best learning environment.... The role of the
teacher would be to create a learning environment, assist
students in acquiring information, provide guidance to the
student, and to participate with the student in the learning
process.
Emphasis of Program at Different Age Levels:
Environmental education activities at each grade level should
focus on the feeling (affective), knowing (cognitive) and skill-
behavior domains. Emphasis in the early years, however,
should be on awareness and feelings and in later years on
knowledge and skill-behavior. The learner should also be
provided with opportunities to explore his immediate
environment with all of his senses—sight, hearing, smell,
touch and taste. The learner should be exposed to a variety of
physical and social environments in order to have experiences
to judge the quality of his immediate environment.
Framework 2
Hungerford, H.R., Peyton, R.B.,
and Wilke, R. (1980)
Goals for Curriculum Development
in Environmental Education
GOAL LEVEL I—The Ecological Foundations Level:
Upon completion of instruction in environmental education,
the learner should be expected to be able to...
       1.  ... communicate and apply the major ecological
          concepts including those focusing on individuals,
          species, populations, communities, ecosystems,
          biogeochemical cycles, energy production and
          transfer, interdependence, niche, adaptation,
          succession, homeostasis, and man as a ecological
          variable.

       2.  ... apply a knowledge of ecological concepts to the
          analysis of environmental issues and identify
          important ecological principles involved.
                                                           Appendix B       93

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                                    3.  ... apply a knowledge of ecological concepts in
                                        predicting the ecological consequences of
                                        alternative solutions to environmental problems.
                                    4.  ...understand the principles of ecology in order to
                                        identify, select and utilize appropriate sources of
                                        scientific information in a continuing effort to
                                        investigate, evaluate and find solutions for
                                        environmental issues.
                              GOAL LEVEL II—
                              The Conceptual Awareness Level:
                                    5.  ...understand and communicate how man's cultural
                                        activities (e.g., religious, economic, political,
                                        social and others) influence the environment from
                                        an ecological perspective.
                                    6.  ...understand and communicate how an
                                        individual's behaviors impact on the environment
                                        from an ecological perspective.
                                    7.  ...identify a wide variety of local, regional,
                                        national and international environmental issues
                                        and the ecological and cultural implications of
                                        these issues.
                                    8.  ... identify and communicate the viable alternative
                                        solutions available for remediating crucial
                                        environmental issues as well as the ecological and
                                        cultural implications of these various solutions.
                                    9.  ... understand the need for environmental issue
                                        investigation and evaluation as prerequisite to
                                        sound decision making.
                                     10.... understand the roles played by differing human
                                        beliefs and values in environmental issues and the
                                        need for personal values clarification as an
                                        important part of environmental decision making.
                                     11.... understand the need for responsible citizenship
                                        action in the solution of environmental issues.
                              GOAL LEVEL III—
                              The Investigation and Evaluation Level:
                                     12.... apply the knowledge and skills needed to
                                        identify and investigate issues (using both primary
                                        and secondary sources of information) and
                                        synthesize the data gathered).
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       13.... demonstrate the ability to analyze environmental
          issues and the associated value perspectives with
          respect to their ecological and cultural
          implications.
       14.... demonstrate the ability to identify alternative
          solutions for important issues and the value
          perspectives associated with these solutions.
       15.... demonstrate the ability to evaluate alternative
          solutions and associated value perspectives for
          important issues with respect to their ecological
          and cultural implications.
       16. ...demonstrate the ability to identify and clarify
          personal value positions related to important
          environmental issues and their associated
          solutions.
       17.... demonstrate the ability to evaluate, clarify, and
          change value positions in light of new information.


GOAL LEVEL IV—The Issue Resolution Skill Level:
       18.... demonstrate a competence with a variety of
          citizenship action skills from the following
          categories of skills: persuasion, consumerism,
          political action, legal action, and ecomanagement.
       19.... evaluate selected actions in light  of their
          ecological and cultural implications.
       20.... demonstrate the ability to apply one or more
          citizenship action skills for the purpose of
          resolving or helping to resolve one or more
          environmental issues.
Framework 3
lota, L., Laveault, D., Marcinkowski, T. (1990)
Assessment of Learning Outcomes
in Environmental Education


Organization of Learning Outcomes
According to Taxonomies of Educational Objectives

Cognitive Domain:
       Knowledge: of ecology, environmental problems and
       issues, and environmental action strategies
       Skills for dealing with action strategies: including
                                                           Appendix B       95

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                                    identification, investigation, and analysis of issues
                                    Skills for dealing with action strategies: including
                                    selecting appropriate action strategies, creating an
                                    action plan, evaluating an action plan, and
                                    implementing an action plan.
                              Affective Domain:
                                    Environmental sensitivity or appreciation:
                                    including 'the characteristics that result in an
                                    individual viewing the environment from an
                                    empathetic perspective' (Peterson,  1982)
                                    Attitudes: towards pollution, technology, economics,
                                    conservation, and environmental action
                                    Values: a preference for selected means and ends;
                                    values such as a healthy environment and a peaceful
                                    world
                                    Moral reasoning: making decisions and judgments
                                    about environmental issues according to one's own
                                    sense of morality
                                    Ethics:  involving the evaluation of a personal world
                                    view which reflects a balance between the quality of
                                    life and the quality of the environment.
                              Responsible Environmental Behavior:
                                    Active participation aimed at solving problems and
                                    resolving issues: environmentally sound consumer
                                    purchasing, methods for conserving resources,
                                    assisting with the enforcement of environmental
                                    regulations, using personal and interpersonal means to
                                    encourage environmentally sound practices, and
                                    encouraging environmentally sound policies and
                                    legislative initiatives.
                              Locus of Control:
                                    Individual's sense that he or she can manifest some
                                    influence upon or control over the outcomes of a
                                    specific activity.
                              Assumption of Personal Responsibility:
                                    Recognition that one's negative behavior has a
                                    negative effect on the environment and, likewise, one's
                                    positive behavior can have potentially positive effects
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       on the environment
       Acceptance of personal responsibility for negative
       environmental effects or impacts, and for one's own
       role in helping to resolve environmental impacts and
       issues
       Willingness to help correct negative environmental
       impacts, and a concomitant willingness to help resolve
       environmental impacts and issues.
Framework 4
Marcinkowski, T. (1991)
The Relationship Between Environmental Literacy and
Responsible Environmental Behavior in Environmental
Education

Environmental Literacy Involves:
       a.  An awareness and sensitivity toward the
          environment.
       b.  An attitude of respect for the natural environment,
          and of concern for the nature and magnitude of
          human  impacts on it.
       c.  A knowledge and understanding of how natural
          systems work, as well as of how social systems
          interface with natural systems.
       d.  An understanding of the various environmentally-
          related  problems and issues (local, regional,
          national, international, and global).
       e.  The skills required to analyze, synthesize, and
          evaluate information about environmental
          problems/issues using primary and secondary
          sources, and to evaluate a select problem/issue on
          the basis of evidence and personal values.
       f.  A sense of personal investment in, responsibility
          for, motivation to work individually and
          collectively toward the resolution of environmental
          problems/issues.
       g.  A knowledge of strategies available for use in
          remediating environmental problems/issues.
       h.  The skills required to develop, implement and
          evaluate single strategies and composite plans for
          remediating environmental problems/issues.
       i.  Active involvement at all levels in working toward
          the resolution of environmental problems/issues.
                                                           Appendix B       97

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                             Framework 5
                             Wisconsin Center for Environmental Education (1992)
                             University of Wisconsin, Steven's Point


                             Cognitive Outcomes:
                                Knowledge of Ecological Principles
                                   Individuals, Populations, and Communities—
                                   habitats, niches, and adaptations; food chains, food
                                   webs; population dynamics; population and
                                   community interactions
                                   Change and Limiting Factors—change as a natural
                                   process; biotic and abiotic limits to growth, size, and
                                   distribution of populations
                                   Energy Flow—sun as primary source, other sources
                                   and forms of energy; transfer and energy through
                                   living systems;  first and second laws of energy—
                                   conservation of energy, entropy; need for a consistent
                                   source of energy by systems and individuals;
                                   photosynthesis and respiration
                                   Biogeochemical Cycling—conservation of matter,
                                   nutrient and materials cycling; hydrologic cycle
                                   Ecosystems and Biodiversity—importance of
                                   biodiversity; interdependence of organisms;
                                   ecosystems
                                Knowledge of Environmental Problems and Issues
                                   Air Quality—ozone depletion; global warming; acid
                                   deposition; air pollution
                                   Water Quality and Quantity—water pollution; use
                                   and management
                                   Soil Quality and Quantity—soil depletion and
                                   pollution; use and management
                                   Wildlife and Habitat—habitat and biodiversity loss;
                                   use and management
                                   Energy—sustainable and non-renewable;
                                   consumption
                                   Human Population and Health—overpopulation;
                                   environmental health hazards
                                   Waste—solid waste; hazardous wastes
                                Knowledge of Environmental Issue Investigation and
                                Action Strategies
                                Knowledge of Strategies Used to Investigate
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   Environmental Problems and Issues
   Knowledge of Appropriate Action Strategies for the
   Prevention or Resolution of Environmental Problems
   and Issues
Affective Outcomes:
      Environmental Sensitivity/Awareness
      Positive Attitudes and Values for the Prevention and
      Remediation of Environmental Problems and Issues
      Regarding: air quality; water quality and quantity; soil
      quality and quantity; wildlife and habitat; energy;
      human population and health; waste
Determinants of Environmentally Responsible
Behavior
      Locus of Control
      Assumption of Personal Responsibility
Environmentally Responsible Behaviors
      Ecomanagement; Economic Action; Persuasion;
      Political Action; Legal Action
Framework 6
Roth, C. (1992)
Environmental Literacy: Its Roots, Evolution and
Directions in the 1990's


Nominal Environmental Literacy:
   Knowledge Strand—Nominally environmentally literate
   individuals are familiar with:
      The nature of the basic components of elemental
      systems (e.g., living and non-living things,
      requirements for life).
      Types and examples of interactions between humans
      and nature.
      Basic components of societal systems.
   Affective Strand—have affective sensitivities about:
      Appreciation of both nature and society.
      Elementary sensitivity and empathy for both nature
      and society.
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                                    Elemental perceptions of points of conflict between
                                    nature and society.
                                 Skill Strand—have skills of:
                                    Identifying and defining problems.
                                    Recognizing issues surrounding identified problems or
                                    proposed solutions (e.g. latent and visible conflicts).
                                 Behavior Strand—demonstrate:
                                    Familial, school and organization activities and habits
                                    aimed at maintenance of environmental quality.
                                    Responding and coping behaviors.


                              Functional Environmental Literacy
                                 Knowledge Strand—The functional environmentally
                                 literate citizen, in addition to the knowledge of the
                                 nominally literate, has knowledge of and understanding of
                                 a number of ecological, economic, geographic, religious,
                                 educational and political processes and understanding of
                                 the effects/impacts of humans on natural systems,
                                 including (abbreviated listing):
                                    Population dynamics
                                    Interactions
                                    Interdependence
                                    Thinking in terms of time frames or scales
                                 Skill Strand—The functionally environmentally literate
                                 demonstrate basic skills in analyzing problems and issues
                                 and conducting  investigations of problems and issues
                                 using primary and secondary resource/strategies such as
                                 (abbreviated listing):
                                    Identifying environmental issues.
                                    Seeking historical background of issues.
                                    Investigating environmental issues.
                                    Evaluating sources of information.
                                    Analyzing environmental issues from various
                                    perspectives.
                                    Applying ecological concepts to predicting probable
                                    ecological consequences.
                                    Identifying alternative solutions and value
                                    perspectives
                                    Evaluating alternative solutions.
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       Conducting basic risk analysis.
       Identifying and clarifying his/her value positions.
       Examining issues from local, national, regional, and
       international points of view.
       Thinking in terms of systems.
       Demonstrating ability to forecast, to think ahead, plan.
   Affect Strand—the functionally environmentally literate
   demonstrate such basic affects, attitudes and values as:
       Identification with, and feelings of concern for, both
       society and the environment.
       Willingness to recognize and choose among differing
       value perspectives associated with problems and
       issues.
       Internal locus of control.
       Treating public and private property with equal
       respect.
       Sense of stewardship.
   Behavior Strand—the functionally environmentally
   literate moves to action through selected lifestyle
   activities/behaviors and community/organizational
   behaviors demonstrated by:
       Taking action positions and actions based on best
       available knowledge.
       Taking individual and/or group action through:
       persuasion, consumerism, political action, legal action,
       ecomanagement


Operational Environmental Literacy
   Skill Strand—Skills involved with evaluating problems
   and issues on the basis of available evidence (facts) and
   personal values and skills used in planning, implementing,
   and evaluating solutions, including using the process skills
   of scientific inquiry:
       using ability to forecast, to think ahead, plan
       using ability to separate number, quantity, quality, and
       value
       imagining
       connecting
       valuing and value analysis
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                                    using primary and secondary sources of information
                                    using ability to separate fact from opinion
                                    determining the roles played by differing human
                                    beliefs and values in environmental issues
                                Affect Strand—Affects, attitudes and values, that
                                indicate a valuation of both nature and society, a sense of
                                investment in and responsibility for the resolution of
                                problems and issues along with a respect for both nature
                                and society and a willingness to participate in, and show a
                                sense of efficacy toward the resolution of problems and
                                issues including (abbreviated listing):
                                    Awareness of and sensitivity to the total environment
                                    and its allied programs
                                    Motivation to actively participate in environmental
                                    improvement and protection
                                    Taking into account historical perspectives while
                                    focusing on current and potential environmental
                                    situations
                                    Strong internal locus of control
                                    Personal responsibility: recognition of impacts of
                                    personal behavior; acceptance of personal
                                    responsibility for the impacts; willingness to help
                                    correct or avoid negative impacts
                                Behavior Strand—Actions that demonstrate leadership in
                                working toward the resolution of problems and issues
                                including:
                                    Evaluating actions with respect to their impact on
                                    quality of life and environment
                                    Providing verbal commitments
                                    Working to maintain biological and social diversity
                                    Continually examining and reexamining the values of
                                    the culture
                                    Making decisions based on beneficence, justice,
                                    stewardship, prudence, cooperation, and compassion
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Framework 7
Environmental Education Literacy Consortium
(Hungerford, H.; Volk, T.; Wilke, R.; Champeau, R.;
Marcinkowski, T.; May, T.; Bluhm, B.; and McKeown-
Ice, R.) (1994)
Environmental Literacy Framework


Cognitive Dimensions (Knowledge and Skills)
   A. Knowledge of ecological and socio-political
      foundations
   B. Knowledge of and ability to identify, analyze,
      investigate and evaluate environmental problems and
      issues
   C. Knowledge of and ability to apply environmental
      action strategies seeking to influence outcomes of
      environmental problems and issues
   D. Ability to develop and evaluate an appropriate action
      plan for the resolution of environmental problems or
      issues
Affective Dimensions
   A. Recognition of the importance of environmental
      quality and the existence of environmental problems
      and issues
   B. Empathic, appreciative and caring attitudes toward the
      environment
   C. Willingness to work toward the prevention and/or
      remediation of environmental problems and issues
Additional Determinants
of Environmentally Responsible Behavior
   A. Belief in their ability, both individually and
      collectively, to influence outcomes of environmental
      problems and issues
   B. Assumption of responsibility for personal actions that
      influence the environment
Personal and/or Group Involvement
in Environmentally Responsible Behaviors
   A. Ecomanagement—e.g. actions such as using a more
      energy efficient form of transportation, reducing
                                                        Appendix B       103

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                                    consumption of energy or water, improving wildlife
                                    habitat, recycling, etc.
                                 B.  Economic/consumer action—e.g., purchasing products
                                    in returnable/reusable containers, avoiding purchase of
                                    excess packaging, avoiding items with toxic by-
                                    products, providing financial support to an
                                    environmental organization, boycotting products
                                    considered to be damaging to the environment, etc.
                                 C.  Persuasion—e.g., using informal discussion to
                                    encourage another to support a positive environmental
                                    position or action, distributing "pro-environment"
                                    literature, signing a petition, encouraging another
                                    individual or group to stop some kind of destructive
                                    behavior, writing a letter to a person/group/company
                                    to stop an action that has negative environmental
                                    consequences, giving a speech, etc.
                                 D.  Political action—e.g., writing letters or speaking
                                    directly to elected officials on behalf of an
                                    environmental issue, supporting by time or finances a
                                    candidate or lobbying group based upon an
                                    environmental issue, running for or serving in an
                                    official capacity with the intent of supporting pro-
                                    environmental positions or actions, etc.
                                 E.  Legal action—e.g. reporting violations in pollution/
                                    littering, fishing, trapping or hunting laws or plant or
                                    animal collecting to the authorities, working with
                                    authorities to patrol areas for enforcing environmental
                                    laws, providing information or testimony at a legal
                                    hearing or participating in a lawsuit against a person/
                                    group who has violated a law aimed at protecting the
                                    environment, etc.
                             Framework 8
                             Learning for a Sustainable Future, Developing a
                             Cooperative Framework for Sustainable Development
                             Education (1994)
                             Education for a Sustainable Future:
                             The Knowledge, Skills and Values Needed

                             Knowledge Needed:
                                    1.  The planet earth as a finite system and the
                                       elements that constitute the planetary environment.
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       2.  The resources of the earth, particularly soil, water,
          minerals, etc., their distribution and their role in
          supporting living organisms.
       3.  The nature of ecosystems and biomes, their health
          and their interdependence within the biosphere.
       4.  The dependence of humans on the environmental
          resources for life and sustenance.
       5.  The sustainable relationship of native societies to
          the environment.
       6.  The implications of resource distribution in
          determining the nature of societies and the rate and
          character of economic development.
       7.  Characteristics of the development of human
          societies including nomadic, hunter-gatherer,
          agricultural, industrial and post-industrial, and the
          impact of each on the natural environment.
       8.  The role of science and technology in the
          development of societies and the impact of these
          technologies on the environment.
       9.  Philosophies and patterns of economic activity and
          their different impacts on the environment,
          societies and cultures.
       10. The process of urbanization and the implications
          of de-ruralization.
       11. The interconnectedness of present world political,
          economic, environmental and social issues.
       12. Aspects of differing perspectives and philosophies
          concerning the ecological and human
          environments.
       13. Cooperative international and national efforts to
          find solutions to common global issues, and to
          implement strategies for a more sustainable future.
       14. The implications for the global community of the
          political, economic and socio-cultural changes
          needed for a more sustainable future.
       15. Processes of planning, policy-making and action
          for sustainability by governments, businesses, non-
          governmental organizations  and the general public.
Skills Needed:
       1.  Frame appropriate questions to guide relevant
          study and research.
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                                    2.  Define such fundamental concepts as environment,
                                        community, development and technology, and
                                        apply definitions to local, national and global
                                        experience.
                                    3.  Use of range of resources and technologies in
                                        addressing questions.
                                    4.  Assess the nature of bias and evaluate different
                                        points of view.
                                    5.  Develop hypotheses based on balanced
                                        information, crucial analysis and careful synthesis,
                                        and test them against new information and
                                        personal experience and beliefs.
                                    6.  Communicate information and viewpoints
                                        effectively.
                                    7.  Work towards negotiated consensus and
                                        cooperative resolution of conflicts.
                                    8.  Develop cooperative strategies for appropriate
                                        action to change present relationships between
                                        ecological preservation and economic
                                        development.


                             Values Needed:
                                    1.  An appreciation of the resilience, fragility and
                                        beauty of nature and the interdependence and
                                        equal importance of all life forms.
                                    2.  An appreciation of the dependence of human life
                                        on the resources of a finite planet.
                                    3.  An appreciation of the role of human ingenuity
                                        and individual creativity in ensuring survival and
                                        the search for appropriate and sustainable progress.
                                    4.  An appreciation of the power of human beings to
                                        modify the environment.
                                    5.  A sense of self-worth and rootedness in one's own
                                        culture and community.
                                    6.  A respect for other cultures and a recognition of
                                        the interdependence of the human community.
                                    7.  A global perspective and loyalty to the world
                                        community.
                                    8.  A concern for disparities and injustices, a
                                        commitment to human rights, and to the peaceful
                                        resolution of conflict.
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      9. An appreciation of the challenges faced by the
         human community in defining the processes
         needed for sustainability and in implementing the
         changes needed.

      10. A sense of balance in deciding among conflicting
         priorities.

      11. Personal acceptance of a sustainable lifestyle and a
         commitment to participation in change.

      12. A realistic appreciation of the urgency of
         challenges facing the global community and the
         complexities that demand long-term planning for
         building a sustainable future.

      13. A sense of hope and a positive personal and social
         perspective on the future.

      14. An appreciation of the importance and worth of
         individual responsibility and action.
Conceptual Frameworks

for Curriculum Materials
The form environmental education takes in practice is based
heavily upon the curriculum materials available to those "in
the field"—for example, teachers, naturalists, volunteer
instructors or museum curators. The conceptual or curriculum
frameworks direct the writing of individual lessons as well as
the overall organization of the materials. Consequently,
looking at how EE has been put into practice is essential to
developing a model or framework for EE guidelines. Of the
abundance of curricula available, a small number of nationally
recognized examples were selected as examples.


Framework 1
Project WILD (1986)


I. Awareness and Appreciation of Wildlife
      A.  Humans and wildlife have similar basic needs
      B.  Humans and wildlife share environments.
      C.  Humans and wildlife are subject to many of the
          same environmental conditions.
      D.  Humans have far greater ability to alter or adjust to
          environments than does wildlife; thus, humans
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                                        have a responsibility to consider effects of their
                                        activities on other life forms.
                              II. Human Values and Wildlife
                                     A. Wildlife has aesthetic and spiritual values.
                                     B. Wildlife has ecological and scientific values.
                                     C. Wildlife has social and political values.
                                     D. Wildlife has commercial and economic values.
                                     E. Wildlife has consumptive and non-consumptive
                                        recreational values.
                              III. Wildlife and Ecological Systems
                                     A. Each environment has characteristic life forms.
                                     B. All living elements of an ecological system are
                                        interdependent.
                                     C. Variation and change occur in all ecological
                                        systems.
                                     D. Adaptation is continuous within all ecological
                                        systems.
                                     E. Living things tend to reproduce in numbers greater
                                        than their habitat can support.
                                     F. Each area of land or water, and ultimately the
                                        planet, has a carrying capacity of plants and
                                        animals.
                              IV. Wildlife Conservation
                                     A. Management of resources and environments is the
                                        application of scientific knowledge and technical
                                        skills to protect, preserve, conserve, limit, enhance,
                                        or extend the value of a natural resource, as well as
                                        to improve environmental quality.
                                     B. Wildlife is one of our basic natural resources,
                                        along with water, air, minerals, soil, and plant life.
                                     C. Good habitat is the key to wildlife survival.
                                     D. Wildlife resources can be managed and conserved.
                                     E. Wildlife conservation practices depend on a
                                        knowledge of natural laws and the application of
                                        knowledge from many disciplines.
                                     F. In the U.S., wildlife is considered to be a public
                                        resource. Ownership of land or water alone does
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          not secure ownership of wildlife on that land or in
          that water as it does in some other countries.
V. Cultural and Social Interaction with Wildlife
       A. Human cultures and societies, past and present,
          affect and are affected by wildlife and its habitat.
       B. Societies develop programs and policies relating to
          wildlife and its habitat through a variety of social
          mechanisms.
VI. Wildlife Issues and Trends: Alternatives and
Consequences
       A. Human impacts on wildlife and its habitat are
          increasing worldwide.
       B. Issues involving wildlife and its habitat are a
          product of social and cultural trends.
       C. Current wildlife issues and trends are complex and
          involve alternatives and consequences.
       D. Many problems, issues, and trends involving
          wildlife in other parts of the world are similar to
          those in this country.
VII. Wildlife, Ecological Systems, and Responsible
Human Actions
       A.  Each person as an individual and as a member of
          society affects the environment.
       B.  Responsible environmental actions are the
          obligation of all levels of society, starting with the
          individual.
Framework 2
Essential Learnings in Environmental Education
(1990)

Natural Systems:
       General: Environment, Earth, Biosphere
       Abiotic Components: Energy, Atmosphere, Land &
       Soil, Water
       Biotic Components: Plant, Animal
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                                  Processes: Weather & Climate, Biogeochemical
                                  Cycles, Evolution and Extinction
                                  Biological Systems: Ecosystems, Food Chains &
                                  Webs, Community, Population, Habitat & Niche
                            Resources:
                                  Natural Resources: Distribution & Consumption,
                                  Management & Conservation, Sustainable
                                  Development

                                  Abiotic Resources: Energy & Minerals, Water, Land
                                  &Soil
                                  Biotic Resources: Forests, Wildlife & Fisheries,
                                  Biodiversity

                                  Degradation of Resource Base: Limits to Systems,
                                  Pollution
                            Human Systems:
                                  Humans and Environment: Humans as part of
                                  environment, human adaptation to environment,
                                  Human influence upon environment, population
                                  factors
                                  Technological Systems: Agriculture, Settlements,
                                  Manufacturing and Technology
                                  Social Systems: Economic systems, Sociopolitical
                                  Systems, Culture and Religion
                                  Environmental Awareness and Protection: Values
                                  and Ethics, Education and Communication,
                                  Participation/Voluntary Action, Legislation &
                                  Enforcement
                            Framework 3
                            Project Learning Tree Environmental Education
                            Activity Guide (1993)

                            Diversity
                                  Diversity in Environments
                                  Diversity of Resources and Technologies
                                  Diversity among and within Societies and Cultures
                                  Interrelationships
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      Environmental Interrelationships
      Resources and Technological Interrelationships
      Societal and Cultural Interrelationships

Systems
      Environmental Systems
      Resource Management and Technological Systems
      Systems in Society and Culture

Structure and Scale
      Structures and Scale in Environments
      Structure and Scale in Resources and Technology
      Structure and Scale in Societies and Culture

Patterns of Change
      Patterns of Change in the Environment
      Patterns of Change in Resources and Technologies
      Patterns of Change in Society and Culture

Framework 4
Project WET Curriculum & Activity Guide (1995)

Conceptual Framework:
      Water has unique physical and chemical
      characteristics.
      Water is essential for all  life to exist.
      Water connects all  Earth systems.
      Water is a natural resource.
      Water resources are managed.
      Water resources exist within social constructs.
      Water resources exist within cultural contexts.
Affective Framework:
      People's awareness of and sensitivity toward water
      and water-related concepts and issues.
      People's attitudes (opinions, likes, dislikes) toward
      water and water-related concepts and issues.
                                                           Appendix B       111

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                                    People's values (consideration of worth, need to
                                    cherish, importance) toward water and water-related
                                    concepts and issues.
                                    People's behavior toward and expression of water and
                                    water-related concepts and issues, influenced by
                                    awareness and sensitivity, attitudes, and values.
                              Skills Framework:
                                    Gathering information.
                                    Organizing information.
                                    Analyzing information.
                                    Interpreting information.
                                    Applying learned information.
                                    Evaluating application of learned information.
                                    Presenting evidence of learning from application and
                                    evaluation.


                              Framework 5
                              Biodiversity Basics, World Wildlife Fund (1999)


                              Part I: The Conceptual Framework
                                 What Is Biodiversity?
                                    The concepts in this theme provide students with a
                                    fundamental knowledge and appreciation of
                                    biodiversity. These concepts also help students
                                    understand the characteristics of living systems and
                                    the fact that the environment is made up of systems
                                    nested within larger systems.
                                    •  Definition of Biodiversity

                                    •  Basic Ecological Principles

                                    •  Key Ecological Definitions that Help to
                                       Understand Biodiversity
                                 Why Is Biodiversity Important?
                                    Concepts in this section can help students investigate
                                    how biodiversity affects their lives and supports life
                                    on Earth. Recognizing the importance of biodiversity
                                    increases students' awareness of why and how
                                    people's actions affect biodiversity and why it's
                                    important to maintain and restore biodiversity.
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       •  Quality of the Environment
       •  Quality of Life (Economics, Health and Safety,
          Socio/Political, Culture)
   What Is the Status of Biodiversity?
       Concepts in this theme help students understand the
       status of biodiversity and why biodiversity is declining
       around the world. By learning about the causes and
       consequences of biodiversity loss, students will be
       able to participate in maintaining biodiversity in the
       future.
       •  Factors Affecting Biodiversity (Population
          Growth, Loss, Degradation, and Fragmentation of
          Habitat, Introduced Species, Over-Consumption of
          Natural Resources, Pollution)
   How Can We Protect Biodiversity?
       Concepts in this section help  students identify ways to
       ensure that adequate biodiversity will be maintained
       for future generations. For students to willingly and
       effectively take action to protect biodiversity, they
       must have a thorough understanding and appreciation
       of what biodiversity is, why it's important, why we're
       losing it, and what people can do to  help maintain and
       conserve it. Students should also begin to understand
       that ecological integrity, social equity, and economic
       prosperity are connected and  are important
       components of a sustainable society.
       •  Studying Biodiversity

       •  Conserving Biodiversity (Role of Values, Role of
          Civil Society, Government, and  Industry, Future
          Outlooks for Maintaining and Restoring
          Biodiversity)


Part II: The Skills Framework
       •  Gathering Information

       •  Organizing Information
       •  Analyzing Information

       •  Interpreting Information

       •  Applying Information

       •  Evaluating Information

       •  Presenting Information

       •  Developing Citizenship Skills
                                                              Appendix B       113

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                             Previous Standards or Criteria
                             Development Projects
                             The quest to define what constitutes quality environmental
                             education is not new. The following outlines represent efforts
                             by the National Science Teachers Association and the
                             American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) to
                             develop guiding principles for environmental education. Also
                             included is material prepared by the American Forum for
                             Global Education suggesting conceptual guidelines for
                             national standards for international studies education.
                             Outline 1
                             National Science Teachers Association, Criteria for
                             Excellence in Environmental Education, Revised Edition

                             Effective environmental education depends on
                             multidisciplinary instruction but has a strong science
                             component. It involves minds-on, direct contact with
                             environments as well as vicarious experiences. The learner
                             grows from awareness and understanding to concern and
                             action.
                             Goal:
                             To develop and practice creativity and critical thinking along
                             with values analyses. Teachers and learners will search for
                             alternative solutions to environmental issues and evaluate the
                             ethical, social, ecological, and economic costs and benefits of
                             alternatives.
                             Curriculum
                                   1.  Provides activities and information in which
                                      people interact with the environment.
                                   2.  Develops in the students the intellectual tools to
                                      effectively explore the world around them.
                                   3.  Directly involves students in investigating the
                                      world around them and their relationship to it.


                             Instruction
                                   1.  Fosters open minds and the generation and
                                      examination of alternatives;
                                   2.  Stimulates and fosters creativity and critical

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          thinking;
       3.  Respects the social, intellectual, and
          developmental maturity of learners;
       4.  Links science with other areas of intellectual and
          emotional activity;
       5.  Provides opportunities for students to be involved
          in environmental activity at an appropriate level of
          challenge; hence, fosters a growing sense of
          confidence that groups and individuals can
          positively affect the environment;
       6.  Relates the components of the ecosystem to our
          health, well-being, and potential for development.


Evaluation
    Effective programs and materials provide:
       1.  Evaluation design based on stated goals,
          objectives, and outcomes;
       2.  Field testing of programs and materials in terms of
          stated goals and objectives;
       3.  Continuous modification and feedback.


Teachers
       1.  Distribute EE guidelines to colleagues;
       2.  Encourage colleagues to increase their
          environmental literacy;
       3.  Hold clearly stated goals and objectives for learner
          behavior;
       4.  Treat controversial issues fairly and honestly;
       5.  Teach people how to think, not what to think.


Outline 2
ASTM, EE Curriculum Draft Standards, Curriculum
Task Group (1991)


These guidelines recommend that formal educational
institutions and agencies develop, promote, and facilitate
environmental  education curricula that enhance environmental
awareness and  knowledge; as such the guidelines will:
       Impart overall environmental awareness and
       knowledge.
                                                            Appendix B       115

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                                     Recognize and emphasize ecology as a critical
                                     cornerstone  of all environmental education programs.
                                     Communicate and apply major ecological concepts to
                                     an improved awareness and understanding of the
                                     environment
                                     (e.g., humans as ecological variables, and extensive
                                     discussions and illustrations of different scales of time
                                     and space as they relate to function and development
                                     of any ecosystem).
                                     Communicate and apply major social science concepts
                                     to an improved awareness and understanding of the
                                     environment.
                                     Demonstrate the usefulness of ecological and social
                                     science concepts in understanding human dependence
                                     upon stable and productive ecological and social
                                     systems for survival.
                              These guidelines recommend that formal educational
                              institutions and agencies develop, promote, and facilitate
                              environmental curricula that demonstrate issue investigation,
                              analysis, and action skills; as such, the guidelines will:
                                     Identify a wide variety of environmental issues and
                                     problems and demonstrate the application of
                                     ecological and social science concepts in recognizing
                                     and interpreting these issues and problems.
                                     Describe how human behavior, beliefs, values and
                                     cultural activities (e.g. religious, economic, political,
                                     social, and others) impact on the environment and
                                     relate to environmental issues and problems.
                                     Recommend various issues investigation strategies
                                     using both primary and secondary sources of
                                     information (e.g. generating research questions;
                                     developing a survey; planning data-collection;
                                     organizing data into charts/tables/graphs; generating
                                     data-based conclusions; developing inferences and
                                     recommendations; and communicating research
                                     findings).
                                     Identify various alternative solutions to environmental
                                     problems and predict the possible or probable
                                     ecological, social, political, legal, and economic
                                     consequences of alternative solutions to these
                                     problems.
                                     Demonstrate a strategy for the identification,
                                     evaluation, and modification of personal  and group
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       value positions and action strategies, relative to the
       environment.
       Demonstrate strategies for the correction of
       environmental problems (e.g. persuasion, consumer
       action, political action, legal action, and
       ecomanagement).
       Identify sources of scientific and social science
       information appropriate to the investigation and
       evaluation of environmental issues, problems, and
       solutions.
These guidelines recommend that formal educational
institutions and agencies develop, promote, and facilitate
environmental education curricula that demonstrate the
following instructional methodologies:
   Goal Orientation
       A knowledge of education philosophy will be used to
       select, develop, and implement auricular programs
       and strategies to achieve both general educational and
       environmental education goals.
   Coordination with Established Levels of
   Environmental Literacy
       Graded environmental education curricula will be
       developed to coordinate with the various levels of
       environmental literacy as detailed in Literacy
       Standards for Environmental Education (refer to
       documents produced by the Environmental Literacy
       Subcommittee: e.g., curricula for the nominally,
       functionally, and operationally literate.)
   Coordination with  Conventional Levels of Instruction
       Environmental education curricula will be developed
       which are targeted toward several primary levels of
       instruction: teacher education, lower/upper elementary
       education, and secondary education. The curricula will
       be designed so that its facilitation and mode of
       presentation will be appropriate to the learning level
       toward which it is targeted.
   Curriculum  Infusion
       Environmental education curricula will be designed
       with open-ended components to allow for (a) ease of
       infusion into existing curricula, (b) opportunities for
       educators to create their own unique topic approaches
       and presentation formats, and (c) on-going
                                                            Appendix B       117

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                                    modifications to reflect the dynamic, ever changing
                                    nature of environmental instruction.
                                Compatibility with Accepted Theories of Teaching and
                                Learning
                                    Environmental education curricula will be developed
                                    that utilize and reflect a wide diversity of instructional
                                    applications, as detailed in Teacher Education
                                    Standards for Environmental Education (e.g.
                                    contemporary theories and practices relating to
                                    education philosophy, learning behavior, teaching
                                    methodologies, evaluation, and development of
                                    curriculum materials).
                                Selection of Appropriate Methodologies/Sites
                                    Environmental education curriculum will select and
                                    implement instructional methodologies and sites
                                    which are appropriate for desired cognitive, affective,
                                    and behavioral outcomes and for a variety of learner
                                    characteristics (e.g. outdoor education methods,
                                    affective education methods, simulation games and
                                    role playing, case study methods, community resource
                                    use, etc.)
                                Evaluation
                                    Environmental education curricula should be designed
                                    for ease of evaluation. The evaluation criteria should
                                    reflect elements typical of any conventional
                                    curriculum as well as evaluation components that may
                                    be unique to the scope of environmental education.
                             Outline 3
                             Smith, A. (1994)
                             Concept Paper on Developing National Standards for
                             International Studies Education

                             Global Issues and Topics
                                    A. Global environment, including biodiversity and
                                       species protection
                                    B. Global resources, the need for conservation,
                                       development of alternative energy sources, and
                                       sustainability
                                    C. Global trends in population and related issues such
                                       as urbanization, migration, growth and control, and
                                       population distribution
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       D. Major economic realities and significant issues of
          international trade, development, aid and
          investment
       E. World peace and security
       F. International human rights and human values
       G. Hunger, food supply and distribution around the
          world
       H. Ethnic conflict, diversity and human commonality
       I.  Significant differences in systems of government
       J.  The United Nations and other international and
          regional organizations
       K. World cultures
       L. Global developments in science and technology
Culture Studies and Area Studies—America and the
World
       A. America's contemporary and historical connections
          with global issues and areas
       B. Understanding individuals' relationships and
          connections with global issues and other cultures
       C. Citizenship responsibilities
                                                           Appendix B      119

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                             References
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                                Environmental Education. Troy, OH: NAAEE, 1990.
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                                Washington, D.C.: World Wildlife Fund, 1999.
                             Curriculum Task Group. Environmental Education
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                                PA:ASTM, 1991.
                             Developing a Cooperative Framework for Sustainable
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                             Environmental Literacy Framework. Unpublished paper by
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                                Southern Illinois University,Carbondale, IL, 1994.
                             lozzi, L., D. Laveault, and T. Marcinkowski. Assessment of
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                             Marcinkowski, T. "The Relationship between Environmental
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                             Project WET. Bozeman, MT: The Watercourse & Houston,
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UNESCOAJNEP. "The Belgrade Charter." Connect 1, no. 1,
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UNESCO/UNEP. "The Tbilisi Declaration." Connect 3, no. 1,
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