ABSTRACT

First Published in 2004. Young people, in particular, want to learn more about contributing to the conservation of the planet, and formal education is beginning to reflect this. The National Curriculum in England and Wales, for instance, includes environmental education as a compulsory cross-curricular theme, and in Australia and the USA there are similar moves to ensure that all students are given an opportunity to learn in this area. The authors, experienced teachers and teacher educators in primary and secondary schools, here explain what environmental education is and how it can best be implemented at school and classroom level. In this handbook, school heads and curriculum co-ordinators will find advice on establishing a whole school policy and motivating the staff who need to implement it. Class teachers will find practical ideas for planning and assessing environmental education in the whole curriculum context. Throughout the book, case studies drawn from a variety of settings allow teachers to see how environmental education can work for them.

chapter |2 pages

Setting the scene

chapter 1|8 pages

Concern for the environment

chapter 4|12 pages

The National Curriculum

chapter |2 pages

Environmental education in schools

chapter 5|26 pages

Planning and practice at the primary level

chapter 8|9 pages

The out-of-school (field work) approach

chapter |2 pages

Practicalities

chapter 11|63 pages

Assessment and evaluation

part |2 pages

Appendices