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πŸ“

Environmental Education: Principles, Methods, and Applications

✍ Scribed by Gerhard Schaefer (auth.), Trilochan S. Bakshi, Zev Naveh (eds.)


Publisher
Springer US
Year
1980
Tongue
English
Leaves
276
Series
Environmental Science Research 18
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The environmental movement of the 1960s made educationists in some parts of the world aware of the significance and importance of ecology in curricula at all levels of education, from kindergarten to post-secondary. A great deal of progress was made in the early 1970s in incorporating environmental awareness programs into educaΒ­ tional systems go that what was once considered a fad was gradually becoming a part of formal education in a number of institutions, especially in Canada and the U.S.A. It was therefore appropriate that an international scientific body devote some time to the issue of ecology in education. Early in 1976, I suggested to the International Association for Ecology (Inteco1) that a symposium on Environmental Education be included in the program of the Second International Congress of Ecology scheduled to be held in Jerusalem in September 1978. In the first draft program of the Congress, the topic was included as a poster session. I considered this inadequate and appealed to the Congress Steering Committee to focus greater attention on environΒ­ mental education. The first draft program contained phrases like "utilization of resources", "conservation problems", "environmental moni toring", and "irreversible changes". These phrases more or less assumed that people in general understood ecological principles. Literature on environmental education seems to suggest that a wide gap separated most of the professional ecologists from a large portion of mankind primarily because we the ecologists have paid scant attention to the ecological education of world's citizens.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Environmental Education β€” A New Word or a New Philosophy of Teaching?....Pages 3-7
Why Environmental Education?....Pages 9-13
Challenge of Environmental Education....Pages 15-17
Environmental Education is too Important to be Left in the Hands of Teachers Alone....Pages 19-30
Front Matter....Pages 31-31
Ecology and Environmental Education in Taiwan....Pages 33-37
Environmental Education in Scotland: Prospects and Problems....Pages 39-56
Ecological Training for Developing Countries: Strategies and Actions of the MAB Programme....Pages 57-75
The Role of UNEP in Environmental Education....Pages 77-93
Front Matter....Pages 95-95
Simulation and Games in Environmental Education: A Workshop....Pages 97-108
Decision Making and Environmental Education....Pages 109-120
Front Matter....Pages 121-121
The Biocybernetic Approach to Understand and Plan Our Environment....Pages 123-127
A Theory of Education as a Basis for Environmental Education....Pages 129-138
Systems Theory and Environmental Education....Pages 139-147
Landscape Ecology as a Scientific and Educational Tool for Teaching the Total Human Ecosystem....Pages 149-163
Front Matter....Pages 165-165
How to Understand and Implement Environmental Education in Japanese High Schools....Pages 167-174
Application of Some Guiding Principles in the Development of a Curriculum for Teaching the Total Human Ecosystem: A Case Study....Pages 175-181
Environmental Education for India β€” A Proposed Plan....Pages 183-190
Teaching Man-Made Ecosystems....Pages 191-197
The Education of Secondary School Teachers in Environmental Studies....Pages 199-204
Teaching the Complex Biological Problems of Wild Vertebrate Populations....Pages 205-212
Front Matter....Pages 165-165
Energy Systems and Environmental Education....Pages 213-231
Field-Oriented Workshop on Environmental Education at Sde Boker, Israel....Pages 233-234
Developing the Sde Boker Version of Environmental Education....Pages 235-239
The Desert Biome β€” A Simple System for Field Investigations of Ecological Principles....Pages 241-253
Eco-Shop Development at an Environmental High School in Israel....Pages 255-262
A Summary of the Discussions on Environmental Education at Sde Boker....Pages 263-271
Closing Statement on the Field-Oriented Workshop at Sde Boker....Pages 273-275
Back Matter....Pages 277-285

✦ Subjects


Environment, general


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