education (11)

Basic course in Ornithology

Environment Education Just three days left for applying!       

Dear All,
20th June 2015, is the last date for applying for the Basic Course in Ornithology 
The inaugural camp will be conducted at BNHS Centre in Mumbai 29-30
August 2015. Following is the address
BNHS Conservation Education Centre
General A K Vaidya Marg
Inside Filmcity
Goregaon (East)
Mumbai: 400065
The accommodation and food will be taken care by BNHS during the camp.
However please note that it will be a dormitory kind of stay with the
basic facilities.  Please note that participants will have to bring their sleeping bags
during the Inaugural Camp.
Regards,
Susan Sharma

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- See more at: http://indianwildlifeclub.com/Ezine/View/Details.aspx?aid=1047#sthash.llO2U94o.dpuf

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Dear Sir/Ma'm

 
Greetings from IDSAsr and a very good morning

 

Guru Arjan Dev(GAD) Institute of Development Studies is a centre for advanced research and training in multi disciplinary areas as diverse as Agriculture and rural development; social change and social structure; environment and resource economics; globalization and trade, industry, labour and welfare; macro economics issues and models; population and development and health policy research. We deem it a great privilege to bring to you kind notice that institute has planned to organize 7th IDSAsr National seminars on the theme: Reconfiguration of Indian Higher Education with effect from March 7-8, 2014.


The contribution of all the players in the field is very necessary for the success of the seminar. Keeping in view your outstanding expertise in the field, we will be highly obliged if you may very kindly favour us with your thought provoking research paper for the seminar. Am sure, this will set the deliberation on the right track. All the papers accepted and presented at the seminar will be published with ISBN of the institute. E- Brochure is available at www.idsasr.org

You are also requested to bring this CFP to notice of all interested in your network. One can also attend and participate in the seminar without paper.


Looking forward for an early date favourable response and see you in the holy city of Golden Temple.

With warm personal regards

 

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What is a Sustainable Hospital

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Why Green/Sustainable Hospitals ?
> The American Hospitals Association has estimated that approximately Six thousand Six hundred tonnes of waste is generated by hospitals per day.
> Hospitals generate hazardous and non-hazardous waste, air emissions, and waste-water
that contribute to air, water, and soil pollution.
> Hospitals are Energy Intensive buildings and single largest users of Chemicals.
 
Thus, by implementing an Green/Sustainable management systems, healthcare facilities can prevent pollution, and analyze and potentially address the Ecological impacts of their  services.
 
What are the Factors that contribute to the Environmental Impact of a Hospital ?
When comparing Ecological footprints of different hospitals the following factors come into picture - 
> Size of the Hospital,Number of Beds,Age of the Establishment;
> Types of Medical treatment provided;
> Types of Research and Teaching conducted;
> Third party vendors,Outsourcing of Services
> Level of Infrastructure development for the local community
 
In general, large hospitals consume more resources and produce more emissions than small
ones. However, as hospitals add beds their per-bed water and energy demands  also
increases.

 
What are the Key areas for Potential Improvements ?
Hazardous Substances 
Some Hazardous substances of potential risk are - heavy metal based compound containing Silver,lead,copper and cadmium ; reactive and explosive substances such as Azides and Peroxide compounds such as Perchloric acids; Anesthesia Gases and Formaldehyde.  
For Receiving, Handling, Storing and Disposal written procedures must be present.Staff should be trained on how to safely use potentially hazardous substances. Moreover, highly Hazardous Substances such as Benzene,Mercury etc,can often be replaced with less Hazardous substances such as Toulene or Xylene.
 
> Waste Management 
The prime criteria for Waste management should be Avoidance ->Re-Use ->Recycling -> Proper Disposal, in the same order. For example, establishing a Surplus Usage program between Hospitals or Different Business facilities can help in Usage of Surplus Chemicals between the organizations. Moreover Wastes such as Paper,Card boards,Scrap Metals,Electronic Scraps,textiles,Office left overs can be Recycled and Re-used. Recyclable materials should be collected in areas where they accumulate and then delivered to central storage areas to be prepared for transportation. 
 
Energy Management
As Hospitals use most of the Energy Guzzling equipment's such as Air Conditioners,lot of energy is wasted. The air-conditioning services and indoor lighting account for about 60 per cent and 20 per cent respectively of total electricity consumption. The Energy Management team should - Audit Energy Usage;Identify Areas and Equipment's consuming Maximum Energy;Development Energy Management plan and Implement it.

Combined heat and power systems can reduce energy use by simultaneously generating electricity (and/or mechanical energy) and thermal energy. They recover waste heat and reduce energy use. Energy Efficient lighting methodology can be used such as replacing g incandescent (bulbs) with fluorescent lamps;Solar panels can greatly reduce the amount of fossil fuel used.

Emission Management

Emissions caused by Sterilizers such as Ethylene Oxide gas should be minimized.Sterilization using ethylene oxide gas, and formaldehyde gas is environmentally hazardous, and a health risk for employees. 
Emissions caused by Anesthetic Gases such as Nitrous Oxide, Haloethane reacts in the stratosphere with atomic oxygen to form NOx which, in turn, breaks down Ozone. Emissions levels by usage of such compounds should be regularly checked so as to prevent Non -Controlled Emissions such as through leakages etc.
Emissions caused by Incinerators include Dioxins, toxic ash residue  that affect the local environment. Such facilities should be built with inbuilt treatment plants so as to control the emission discharge.
 
What are the Key Features of Environmental Management System for Health Care Facilities ?

A healthcare facility should commit to improving its environmental performance by encouraging all employees to actively strive to reduce pollution, improve performance and cut costs.

Using an EMS a Health care Facility can - 
> Identify and Reduce Emission problems,
> Reduce energy, water and waste disposal costs,
> Control the Handling of Hazardous Substances,
> Comply with the Applicable regulations and law,
> Reduce operating costs
> Conduct Environmental Friendly Purchase and Procurement
 
Conclusion
Thus, to become a Green Health Care facility involves many aspects such as Green Building design, Energy Efficiency Plan,Hazardous Substance and Waste Management. LEEDS provide internationally recognized certification system for Green Facilities. Hospitals should strive for such established platforms through different levels of certifications - Platinum,Silver and Gold. It is administered that instead of Opting for Cost Intensive Green Features, Hospitals opt start off with Smaller initiatives that show immediate results and then build on their success.
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At the turn of the 20th Century,the majority of Indians lived in Rural areas and small towns.However, at the beginning of 21st century,every 4th Indian is a city dweller. As a city dweller as myself,many of us are in desperate  need of open spaces and refresh ourselves in the outdoors. 
City parks improve our physical and psychological health, and make our cities and neighbourhoods more attractive places to live and work. However, too few Indians are able to enjoy these benefits. More than 70% percent of Indian City Dwellers live in areas that  are severely lacking in park space. Only 10-20% percent of City residents live within walking distance of a nearby park. Also it has been seen that Low-income neighbourhoods populated by minorities and recent immigrants are especially short of Open spaces. Hence, there is a strong need to address such imbalances. 
 
Some of the steps that will Promote Urban Parks are as follows - 
 
1. Urban Parks as Community Places 
India is a country of festivals. Festivals such as Diwali or Holi must be celebrated in parks. This provides a wonderful opportunity to enliven and enlarge the public realm of the city. Green spaces, Meditation centres and Hiking trails should be built in new age Urban parks for enhancing the Community Engagement. Walking Roller Coaster ride is an exquisite example  of how Open Urban spaces can be made more Socially Engaging.
 
2. Parks as Playgrounds for Poor Neighbourhoods 
In poor neighbourhoods, most of the Schools have poorly designed School-yard. Simply slabs of asphalt surrounded by barbed wire fences, with a locked gate. For a few hours each school day, children use them to burn off steam,and the valuable land gets no maintain-ance  after schools hours. Thus, through Public Private partnership such Schools can rent upPlay-Yards in Urban spaces specifically designed for them.Such Social proposition will be beneficial for both the Neighbourhood and the Urban park.
 
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Hiking,Biking,Nature Trail ..U just name it !! 
 
3.Tax-Free Biking to Work Through a Park
Urban Parks should be designed in such a way that Biking trails create a short and exciting route to your work. Also, Tax Free cycling schemescan be promoted by NGO's through Government schemes for Green Transportation. Designing such Urban Landscapes will necessarily pave way for promoting Urban parks and Green Transportation. More so, if the existing Parks can be designed with Spaces where people can Dock there Electronic devices and Work then the purpose will be doubly benefited. 
 
4. Parks as Recreation centres for Youth
Parks can serve the purpose of Youth Development community-based activities that help them build essential skills,knowledge, and aptitudes.The assets both children and youth need for their  development fall into the major domains -  physical, intellectual, psychological

and social. Community based programs that are Fun can help both Kids and Youth to acquire skills in any of the 4 domains. Organizing a Debate competition on Ecological benefits of park, Promoting Hiking and Biking for the youth and planting a community garden are all physically challenging yet intellectually stimulating activities of youth development. Also, Eco Friendly Gyms for the Youth should be developed and promoted.

5. Rain Water Harvesting, Recycling and Reuse Centre 
As the catchment area is large,Parks present huge opportunity for Rain water harvesting.The water collected can be used for ground water table enhancement, and for Public Water supply for nearby neighbourhood. More so, through Public-Private partnership NGO's can demonstrate Recycle, Reuse activities and organize such events. Thus, Urban Parks can Promote Sustainability within the vicinity.


Mahatma Gandhi ji  has said - The earth, the air, the land and the water are not an inheritance from our fore fathers but on loan from our children. So we have to handover to them at least as it was handed over to us.”  

It is the responsibility of the City Administrators and Concerned citizens that this Era of Relentless building of Pavements and Concrete must be regulated and Green Areas must be promoted. This will enhance the quality of life for every city dweller. Thus, using such innovative methods Urban parks can be integrated into the Busy lives of us City Dwellers.
 
I will end the post with this amazing experience of Best Parks around the world from Sustainable Living tips - http://www.sustainablelivingtips.net/2009/09/worlds-best-urban-parks.html
Enjoy the virtual tour ..
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On a 12 hr average working hours a day most of us spend approximately 3hours or more in traffic in most of the tier 1 cities in India. Our local governments are trying to address this issue broadly,however the results are remarkably in Vain. Sunita Narain, director general of CSE India has rightly pointed out several factors in her latest blog 'Temporary Solution,Permanent Jam'. Factors that temporary solve the issue,leaving room for permanent failure define the characteristic of most of the measures that Government is engaging now.
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A Comparative Case Study(2012)
According to a News Published in DNA paper couple of months back,the city of Pune has now more than 23 lakh vehicles as compared to Mumbai which has 21 lakh vehicles.Interestingly Mumbai has a population of around 1.25 Crores while Pune has just over 55lakh. More so, while Mumbai has around 5000 Buses along with the network of Local trains,Pune has just around 1500 Buses for the whole population.According to Pune regional transport office, nearly 775 New vehicles are added each day,adding to the traffic woes in Pune. General Public state Poor Public transport as the Main reason because of which people are forced to use Private vehicles.
 
A CLASSIC Deadlock Isn't it !!
 
Possible Solutions
Well !! Most of the points made below are long term Solutions and Corrective actions that Local action bodies,Public-Private partners and Government should implement. 
 
1. CAP the Number of Vehicles Added every year
A Harsh method but a MUST method. The ever increasing number of Vehicles added per year should be capped at a manageable level. More so,Easy LOANS available for vehicles must be regularised,meaning higher Interest rates must be charged to Individuals who purchase subsequent vehicles after one. Local Governing bodies can provide incentives to Public and Private Banks to account for such action. Message is clear here,unnecessary increase in Vehicular population MUST be Deterred.
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2.Incentives for Using Public Transport
Increasing the existing capacity of Public transport is not much helpful. However, the existing facilities must be improved such as increasing the number of Green Buses,Better connectivity within city through Trams and Rails and so on. Tax reduction schemes by Employers and Local Governing bodies must be promoted for individuals using Public Transport on regular basis. No CAR or Personal Vehicle days must be organized in Cities in order to Promote Public Transport too.
 
3. Build Self Sufficient Housing Societies 
Aim is to curb Short Distance Travels within the city. New Housing societies Must have ATM or E Banking outlets, Recognized and Registered Kindergarten for young toddlers,Shopping and Marketing facilities and so on. Also, work from Home culture  and increased usage of IT facilities for Daily requirements must be promoted. More so, various Public and Privatecompanies can Tie Up with Infrastructure Building companies for creating such Self sufficient Housing Societies or Estates within the vicinity. 
 
4. Promote Congestion Pricing 
The whole point is do deter People from using the City Centre  during the peak hours. Inspired by the success of London Congestion Charge this method helps in evenly distributing traffic and regulating the flow of vehicles in the city centre. Real Time Congestion Monitoring Devices and Systems have to be used. A recent report on Stockholm traffic monitoring states approximately 18% reduction of traffic during the rush hours at the city centre.
 
5. Build Self Sufficient 'Sub Cities' within Cities
Pune Chinchwad Municipality in tie up with JnNURM has in part implemented this methodology. The Pune Chinchwad area is now a Sub City, a self sufficient one, within the City of Pune. People staying in this area do not have to travel to the city centre of Pune Municipality on a daily basis. Such an initiative has become successful because of explicit Political Will and Innovative Public Private partnership. My post on 21st Century Urban City Planning  explicitly states the types and design of New age Super cities. Urban planners now have to consider the city demographics to make such Self Sufficient Sub Cities.
 
As responsible citizens we have to rise also above the typical Indian Society pressure of 'Creating' a Status Symbol and Owing more and more things.Deliberate Consumerism is not going to Boom the general Economy but is going to Bane the Ecology too. Also, we have to Advocate our next generation about the importance of Environment and Sustainability,thereby promoting the usage of Environmentally friendly transportation.
 
We have to remember that Simple Living = Sustainable Living = Healthy Earth.
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   Greetings to all you budding enviro-enthusiasts and academic professionals alike!! Since so many students and environmental professionals are part of this expanding network, I would like to take this opportunity to introduce one of the finest training institutes for environmental education in our country.      

   BVIEER was the brainchild of Dr Erach Bharucha, started way back in the early 90's. Gradually it has grown from being an institute founded in his house, to a recognized 'A' grade NAAC accredited institute in Katraj, Pune, as of today. BVIEER conducts post graduate training courses in E.V.S. as well as in Geo-Informatics. The institute has been involved in various projects sponsored by the state as well as central governments over the years, a recent one being a study on the current ecological status and identification of potentially sensitive areas in the Northern Western Ghat region (headed by Dr Madhav Gadgil) which dealt with the conservation of natural resources and biological heritage in this globally recognized hotspot of biodiversity. Students passing out from this institute have known to be well equipped with theoritical as well as practical knowledge through field visits to wildlife sanctuaries, industries, national & international seminars, workshops, etc. The institute also has an international collaboration with the University of Cologne, Germany. Getting a job post training, has never been an issue with the students here, as the faculty is well connected with the current industrial scenario.

   More information regarding the courses are given in the link below. I request all of you, especially the green teachers, to go through the BVIEER website and advice students who want to take up safeguarding the environment professionally, to consider this institute seriously as a stepping stone in their career. 

GEO-Enviroment Poster FEB2012.pdf

Website: http://ieer.bharatividyapeeth.edu

         

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To educate and enlighten

“The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles, but to irrigate deserts.”

― C. S. Lewis


With the introduction of Environmental Studies in the Indian educational syllabus since the early 2000s, many of us have started appreciating the need for environmental education for children in particular. However, many of us are not aware of the good work being done by some organizations in this field for the past many years. One such stellar Non-governmental Organization (NGO) is Paryavaran Dakshata Manch. Started in July 1999, Paryavaran Dakshata Manch, the founders of this NGO recognized the need for continued environmental awareness raising and education much before the Supreme Court needed to step in to make the subject mandatory for school children.


The brainchild of a group of friends in Thane (a north-eastern suburb of Mumbai), the efforts of Paryavaran Dakshata Manch has been educating school children about conservation, biodiversity, and preserving and protecting natural resources such as forests and creeks for many years now. Simple exercises like educating children and citizens about the use of paper flags instead of plastic ones ahead of the Republic and Independence Days strikes a chord with them. Another popular festival with an eco-friendly twist is Rakshabandhan. Paryavaran Dakshata Manch encourages children to celebrate Rakshabandhan by tying rakhiaround their favourite tree. They then take a vow to take care of the tree and protect it, and further the cause of conservation.


The organization’s efforts are particularly notable due to the fact that it caters to a variety of students, including those whose medium of school instruction is Marathi. Since 2003, the NGO has been publishing the Aapale Paryavaran magazine, which is the only Marathi magazine devoted entirely to environmental issues. In a world where information on environmental issues is undoubtedly easy to find online, we forget that it is primarily available in English. Updating this material and presenting it to students in Marathi is of prime importance. Other noteworthy activities conducted by the NGO throughout the year include nature trails and camps, and the annual Nisarg Mela, a workshop-based event. Last year, close to 1,200 students from about 40 schools participated in the Mela, thus attesting to its popularity. Most recently, the organization introduced a scholarship programme called Nisarg to encourage students to conduct research on environmental issues. Under this flagship scheme, five groups of deserving students who have completed the tenth grade (SSC) are given a sum of Rs. 10,000/-. The research proposals are evaluated by a panel of judges and thereafter, the chosen groups receive guidance from experts on the basic principles of research methodology. Projects are to be completed within six months. Paryavaran Dakshata Manch hopes such efforts engender a spirit of inquiry and problem-solving within the younger generation.


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Above: School students posing with a rakhi tied to “their tree” on the occasion of Rakshabandhan. By doing so, they promise to nurture the tree.


 

Paryavaran Dakshata Manch does not concentrate on school-going students alone. Last Diwali, it hosted two stalls, one each at National College (Bandra) and IBM Business Centre (Malad). The stall at IBM was a product stall where volunteers showcased friendly material like vermicompost, the “Magicbucket” specially designed by them to make vermicompost, paper bags, and artefacts made from wooden waste material by Pragati Prathisthan an NGO working in the Adivasi belt of Jawahar (Thane district). The stall at National College was geared towards raising awareness about environmental issues during the college’s Diwali Mela. In 2010, the NGO also conducted Nandanvan Sunder Gharghuti Baug, a competition of home gardens in Thane and Dombivli.


So how does this make Paryavaran Dakshata Manch different from the other NGOs working in the environmental education arena? For one thing, aside from a full-time small and dedicated staff, a large number of volunteers continue to find time to devote towards environmental issues. Professor Vidyadhar Walawalkar, one of the co-founders of Paryavaran Dakshata Manch,is particularly thankful for all the support the organization has received from various quarters, including its wonderful employees and staff, and the volunteers who help run its initiatives. Aside from donations from well-wishers, all its activities are funded through profits made by their common biomedical waste management consultancy located at Thane. Professor Walawalkar, who is also a Senior Lecturer in Chemistry at Thane’s VPM Polytechnic, puts particular importance on the concept of “social entrepreneurship”. A social entrepreneur recognizes a social problem and uses entrepreneurial principles to organize, create and manage a venture to achieve social change. While a business entrepreneur typically measures performance in profit and return, a social entrepreneur focuses on creating social capital, particularly to further social and environmental goals. Typically, in such ventures, the management and employees are brought together by a common goal, and themselves become the shareholders at the organization. As a result, there is a greater stake at ensuring goals are met and that the organization continues to prosper.


If only we had more such organizations, we could change the face of India.

 

This article was contributed by Mahazareen Dastur. Based in Mumbai, she has been associated with environmental issues for over a decade now.

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Environment and Education: A Pathway to Sustainability 

 

 

Dr Gursharan Singh Kainth

                                  Director

                                   Guru Arjan Dev Institute of Development Studies

14-Pret Avenue, Majitha Road

PO Naushera, Amritsar143008

                                            

 

Human resource development is the key to successfully achieving sustainable development, and a range of educational measures, including formal, non-formal and informal education and learning in broad terms is the primary tool to develop the human capacity required for sustainable development. Pertinent practices are widespread in various forms and efforts are ever expanding and their contribution to sustainable development is demonstrated in a number of cases at individual, group, community and local levels. However, despite their potential and expectations, the impacts of educational measures on society-wide changes have yet to be demonstrated with substantiated evidence. Considering the critical importance and urgency of realizing the changes for shaping the sustainable future in the region, serious efforts are needed to reorient education policies and programmes and enhance their relevance and effectiveness in contributing to the attainment of sustainable development. Sustainable development cannot be achieved by education alone. A national multi stakeholder process to deal with education for sustainable development should be initiated as a first step to establish a coordinating mechanism for education for sustainable development. The process essentially involves: a) definition and recognition of a broad range of relevant stakeholders for education for sustainable development, including, in particular, representatives of government agencies, schools, universities, education institutions, NGOs, business, religious groups and community- based organizations, b) improvement of communication among those groups, and c) establishment of a national forum or council for multi stakeholder consultation. A media campaign for general sensitization on education for sustainable development would also be conducted to facilitate the process.

Once such an organizational foundation has been established, the development of a national master plan for education for sustainable development should be undertaken, with the participation of all stakeholders as a prerequisite. This master plan will provide an overall policy framework and action strategy for all stakeholders in the country to join forces to promote their respective activities in an integrated manner towards the attainment of the common goal of sustainable development. Proposals on enabling policy measures for promoting such initiatives and programmes may also be addressed in the master plan. Such an arrangement should include: a) the securement of a strong political commitment with top-level leadership, and b) the establishment of a mechanism for inter-ministry coordination. A core group, such as an inter-ministry task force, should be designated with appropriate authority and responsibility. An important mandate of the core group will be capacity-building for government officials (in all sectors), and reviewing/reorienting existing policy instruments across all ministries concerned, including stocktaking from other international initiatives addressing education issues. Particular attention should be paid to government functions in terms of channeling of national/local undertaking with international initiatives, such as regional networking, and with external financial resources. The United Nations Decade for Education for Sustainable Development, 2005-2014, is very timely as it provides an indispensable opportunity to boost the concerted efforts at national, regional and global levels and mobilize the necessary resources to comprehensively respond to the major challenges of education, public awareness and training in achieving sustainable development that were addressed in the past decade. Nevertheless, the challenges are enormous as education for sustainable development has to meet the broad expectation that it should play a principal role in achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the target year of which has been set in 2015, just after the completion of the decade.

 

Environmentally sound and sustainable development is not only a trendy phrase, it is a commitment made by international community at the Earth Summit embodied in Rio Declaration and in Agenda 21.  The Earth Summit, the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 alerted the world to the complex nature of the issues underlying environmental sustainability. Perhaps the most pertinent was the increasing divergence between the northern ‘environment’ agenda and the ‘development’ agenda shared by the poorer nations. Many countries who were eager for economic development used the Summit to bring the world’s attention to the stark choices they face between development, environmental protection and the need to overcome poverty. However, the realization at Rio that the existing development trends leave increasing numbers of people poor and vulnerable served to redefine and clarify the links between environment and development concerns.

The Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro saw the essential indivisibility of environment, peace and development. It also recognized that global independence could no longer be conceived only in economic terms. Alongside, there was the calculus of military parity. They were related to the instability sprawled by widespread poverty, squalor, hunger, disease, illiteracy. They were connected to the degradation of the environment. They were enmeshed with inequity and injustice (Dodswell 1995).Recognizing that no nation could resolve these issues on their own, those attending the Summit signed agreements on international co-operation in tackling development and environment concerns. These concerns included ‘the perpetuation of disparities between and within nations, a worsening of poverty, hunger, ill health and illiteracy and a continuing deterioration of the eco-system on which we depend for our well-being’. Most significantly, Agenda 21, of the conference called for ‘a global partnership for sustainable development’ (UNCED 1992, Preamble).

With growing recognition of unavoidable interaction among environmental, economic and social concerns, environmental issues have been more progressively discussed in the broader context of sustainable development. The Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development, adopted at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002, explicitly highlighted the collective responsibility of all mankind to advance and strengthen the interdependent and mutually-reinforcing three pillars of sustainable development – economic development, social development and environmental protection – at the local, national, regional and global levels (United Nations, 2002b). This notion essentially implied a need for significant change in scope and orientation for environmental education, and for the emergence of a new vision of education for sustainable development.

In 2002, the proposal for establishing the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) was endorsed at the World Summit for Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg. The UN General Assembly later adopted the decade by consensus, designating the years of the decade as 2005-2014. The decade provides an opportunity for a concerted effort to integrate the various values inherent in sustainable development into every aspect of learning, through all forms of education, training and public awareness raising, to encourage changes in behaviour that allow for a more sustainable society. Internationally collaborative work is under way aiming at the development of the International Implementation Scheme and subsequently the Regional Implementation Strategies (UNESCO, 2005a, 2005b)

Achieving Sustainability: The Role of Education

There is wide agreement that education has an important role to play in motivating and empowering people to participate in the changes towards more sustainable lifestyles. It was a quarter of a century ago, that education was described (Schumacher 1973) as the ‘greatest resource’ for achieving a just and ecological society. Since then, the major international reports have emphasized the critical role education to play for sustainable living.

Education for sustainability is the continual refinement of the knowledge and skills that lead to an informed citizenry that is committed to responsible individual and collaborative actions that will result in an ecologically sound, economically prosperous, and equitable society for present and future generations. The principles underlying education for sustainability include, but are not limited to, strong core academics, understanding the relationships between disciplines, systems thinking, lifelong learning, hands-on experiential learning, community-based learning, technology, partnerships, family involvement, and personal responsibility

 

Awareness and concern about environmental, economic, and equity issues must become firmly rooted in public consciousness. Also needed is an in-depth understanding of the short- and long-term implications of decisions and choices. To produce that understanding, students and adults need to know how natural systems work and appreciate natural cycles. But such knowledge is only the beginning. Also needed is an understanding of the interdependence of economic, social, political, and ecological conditions -- in rural and urban areas as well as locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally.

In addition to formal classroom education, this objective can be implemented through various kinds of nonformal education, such as a multifaceted public awareness campaign. Advances in information and communication technologies (ICTs) will help in this effort by broadening awareness of sustainability and helping bridge cultures and continents in ways never before possible.

The Brundtland Report, (WCED 1987) argued that teachers had ‘a crucial role to play in helping to bring about the extensive social changes’ necessary for sustainable development. The 1980 World Conservation Strategy was more explicit about the role of education in bringing about such changes. It argued that:

A new ethic, embracing plants and animals as well as people is required for human societies to live in harmony with the natural world on which they depend for survival and well-being. The long term task of environmental education is to foster or reinforce attitudes and behaviours compatible with this new ethic’. (IUCN, UNEP & WWF 1980).

Education is critical for promoting sustainable development and improving the capacity of the people to address environment and development issues...It is critical for achieving environmental and ethical awareness, values and attitudes, skills and behaviour consistent with sustainable development and for effective public participation in decision-making’ (UNCED 1992).

Chapter 36 on ‘Promoting education, public awareness and training’ was one of the few aspects of Agenda 21 which did not provoke contention at the Earth Summit. Both economically developed and developing countries agreed that education was critical for promoting sustainable development and increasing the capacity of the people to address environment and development issues (UNESCO-UNEP 1996).As a result, many environmental education policies and programmes around the world are taking on board the new vocabulary of sustainable development and acknowledge the need to mobilize all sectors of society, not just formal education in the task of achieving sustainability (Agyeman et al. 1996). All educational programmes need to be planned, designed and implemented with a clear reference to the desired target, i.e., the development of key capacities as identified above.

 Integrated Approach Involving All Forms of Education

Sustainable development is a complex undertaking with connections to every part of life. Capacities required for sustainable development are enormous and can only be enhanced by engaging all possible measures of education, training and awareness-raising opportunities. In fact, education for sustainable development should take place within a perspective of lifelong learning, encompassing all modes of education initiatives; formal, non-formal and informal, from early childhood to adulthood. Available educational opportunities should not be equated with schooling or formal education alone, nor can they be conceived to limit non-formal environmental education (EE) activities provided by NGOs or advocacy groups.

A lifelong learning perspective sees all the different modes of education as a continuous and interactive process, to collectively promote the societal changes towards sustainable development. Roles by different modes of education can be outlined as follows:

Formal education - With the perspective of “education for all,” it carries a particular importance in providing basic education to the majority of the population, which is key to a nation’s fundamental development, particularly through the improvement of literacy and numeracy. Common curricula like mathematics, science, health and physical education and social studies serve to develop a nation’s intellectual infrastructure which is basic to promoting economic and social development. Higher education also responds to societal needs for trained professionals as well as to the leadership required for the construction of modern institutions in various sectors and for improving the standard of living. Subjects of law, economics, science, engineering, agriculture and medical science all contribute to supporting the process of sustainable development.

Non-formal education – In the past, non-formal education demonstrated an impressive development in its scope and magnitude of delivery, in particular, in the field of environmental education (EE). It was developed in response to local needs and priorities, and thus closely linked to the development of the required human capacities within the local context. Non-formal education has advantages, e.g., its curricula are flexible and can be designed relatively quickly, participatory and interactive approaches are inherently adopted in its education methodologies, and it readily reaches a broader audience, i.e., the

general public, beyond that of the formal education system. NGOs and community-based organizations have been widely recognised as the primary providers of non-formal environmental education and are gaining greater responsibilities and influence in the development of education of this particular mode.

Informal education - This mode of learning takes place in the family, community, workplace and social interaction, as well as through the media (e.g., newspapers, television and radio) and a diversity of indigenous methods and processes, such as religions, informal beliefs, cultural activities, popular art, theatre and music. Informal learning generally raises public awareness on socio-economic and environmental implications of human activities, and shares relevant information for important decision-

making. In particular, vocational training addresses a range of business operations, including technical and managerial aspects, and thus enhances the participant’s skills in directing those operations more compatible with sustainable development, while a number of religions in Asia and the Pacific, such as in Buddhism and Hinduism, promote respect and cultural belief related to nature conservation and sustainability issues.

A range of efforts and initiatives were taken for decades to strengthen the roles of different modes of education and to enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of their delivery in response to their respective weaknesses and problems identified from the past experiences. However, these efforts are mostly promulgated on an ad hoc basis and lack appropriate linkage across the sectors as well as inter-agency coordination in a consistent framework.

Synergy among different modes of educational efforts must be created, and an integrated approach needs to be employed. Formal, non-formal and informal education should be recognised as indispensable components of education for sustainable development, a strategic framework to ensure that they work in tandem to collectively cover all skills and expertise, values, and behavioural changes indispensable for sustainability. Pioneering initiatives are being observed in many parts of the region. Linking literacy education to health, environmental awareness and other sustainable development concerns is progressively undertaken, inter alia, by community education groups in India (Uttarakhand Seva Nidhi, 2004). Initiatives for strengthening the collaboration between formal and non-formal sectors are under way in Indonesia where the formal education sector created “Local Study” as a subject in the school programme, and NGOs and universities work together to develop and disseminate environmental education materials for use in the subject course across the nation (Hans Seidel Foundation, 2005). In Japan, the 1998 revision of the “Course of Study,” or the basic national guidelines for school education set by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports and Technology, stipulated the introduction of a new course subject, “Period of the Integrated Studies” (Sogo Gakushu no Jikan) in the school curriculum, which provided a window for bringing NGO programmes and community-based, non-formal environmental education into an integral part of school education (Box 8-1). Innovative materials, textbooks and tools, such as Kids-ISO, developed by non-formal sectors including NGOs, business and academia are progressively used in this course. Effective coordination and specialization according to differentiated roles and effectiveness of education modes attracts special attention (Box 8-8). This viewpoint is particularly important if education for sustainable development is to be promoted effectively within the limited available resources.

Problems of Environmental Education

Along with the proliferation of environmental education practices, information and knowledge-based on practical experiences should be  progressively exchanged and fed back for further improvement of education programmes and their delivery. An IGES workshop on the Regional Strategy on Environmental Education in the Asia-Pacific Region, held in December 1999, was a landmark event where experts discussed the issues and problems related to the delivery of environmental education at different levels (IGES, 2002). Most of the major problems of environmental education, in particular those encountered at the operational level, were already raised in the workshop. Some of those problems included:

Inadequate Educational Infrastructure – A lack of appropriate infrastructure is very common in the education sector in developing countries in the region. School buildings are often dilapidated and lack minimum facilities, such as furniture, classroom, laboratories, library, materials, tools and equipment. Because of a lack of designated space, non-formal classes are being operated in shifts.

Inadequate Curriculum Development – Existing curricula, in particular, in school education, are mostly knowledge-based and inflexible in incorporating additional subjects or activities to involve students in a broader perspective of leaning on ecological sustainability in locally-relevant contexts. In most environment education programmes, curricular components are often dominated by the natural sciences and do not reflect the multi-disciplinary characteristics of environmental education, nor are they constructed around accurate scientific or ecological concepts.

Lack of Trained Teachers – There is a great shortage of trained and competent human resources, especially environmental educators and facilitators. The lack of training opportunities that focus on content and methodology of environmental education, as well as incentives to motivate teachers to enhance their competency, is significant. In fact, these were considered the areas where policy intervention and support are definitely required. In effectively addressing these problems, there is need for identification of  the needs of overall policy intervention, in particular, for:

(i) Enhancing the integrity of national policy/strategy for environmental education, which provides a basic principle for guiding the broad range of environmental education activities in a country in an integrated and coordinated manner;

(ii) Improving the institutional coordination among different educational sectors and the governmental agencies to ensure that financial, technical and human resources are appropriately mobilized and allocated to support the sound development of an education infrastructure and curricula as well as training/ capacity-building activities targeting different sectors; and,

(iii) Enhancing the availability of, and facilitating access to, relevant data and information, especially on environmental trends, conditions, solutions and alternatives.

Most of these problems and policy requirements are not specific to environmental education. The findings in the environmental education field are largely relevant to the cases of thematic education in other subject areas addressing the important components of sustainable development, such as poverty, health, social cohesion, and local development, and thus can be applied to the further promotion of those thematic education efforts

How can Education for Sustainability be accomplished?

Education for sustainability can give people the tools, skills, and experience they need to understand, process, and use information about sustainable development. It will help them make individual and collective decisions that both benefit themselves and promote the development of sustainable communities. And it will provide a means for creating a more highly skilled and globally competitive workforce and developing a more informed, active, and responsible citizenry.

Integrated approach involving all forms of education

Sustainable development is a complex undertaking with connections to every part of life. Capacities required for sustainable development are enormous and can only be enhanced by engaging all possible measures of education, training and awareness-raising opportunities. In fact, education for sustainable development should take place within a perspective of lifelong learning, encompassing all modes of education initiatives; formal, non-formal and informal, from early childhood to adulthood. Available educational opportunities should not be equated with schooling or formal education alone, nor can they be conceived to limit non-formal environmental education (EE) activities provided by NGOs or advocacy groups. A lifelong learning perspective sees all the different modes of education as a continuous and interactive process, to collectively promote the societal changes towards sustainable development. But how can it be accomplished? The following key principles are identified about education for sustainability.

EFS must involve everyone.

Education on any topic, but particularly on sustainability, should flow from school to community and back again. Educators at all levels should reach beyond school walls, as many successful programs already do, to involve parents, industry, communities, and government in the education process. Colleges and universities should work with other schools and communities -- to deliver information, identify questions for research, and provide direct services to help solve community problems. For their part, communities should take a stronger interest in educating their citizens for sustainability, recognizing that current and future generations will need to be well-educated on this topic in order to bring about a sustainable future.

EFS emphasizes relationships between formal and nonformal education.

It thrives in all types of classrooms, exposing students to local, state, national, and international issues through hands-on, experiential learning in alternative educational environments -- such as wading through streams to do water quality testing, volunteering in the community, or participating in school-to-work programs. Because sustainability is all-encompassing, learning about it cannot and should not be confined to formal settings such as schools, universities, colleges, and training institutions. Nonformal education settings, such as museums, zoos, extension programs, libraries, parks, and mass media, provide significant opportunities to complement and build on classroom learning. This means that formal and nonformal educators should work together to produce an educated citizenry.

EFS emphasizes connections.

Educating for sustainability does not follow academic theories according to a single discipline but rather emphasizes connections among all subject areas, as well as geographic and cultural relationships. Rather than weaken the rigor of individual disciplines, education for sustainability offers an opportunity to strengthen them by demonstrating vital interrelationships. Students must strive to achieve high standards within the core disciplines, even as they develop an understanding of the connections across these disciplines. Further, education for sustainability involves consideration of diverse perspectives, including those of ethnic groups, businesses, citizens, workers, government entities, and other countries.

EFS is practical.

While delving into many disciplines, education for sustainability helps students apply what they learn to their daily lives. It engenders a sense of efficacy. Part of sustainability education is learning citizenship skills and understanding that citizens have the power to shape their lives and their communities in light of their vision of a healthy and prosperous future.

EFS is lifelong.

Continual efforts should be made to institute programs about sustainability in a variety of arenas, including the workplace and community centers and through the media. A citizenry knowledgeable about the benefits of sustainable living will have the capacity to create and maintain lasting change. Benefits to the individual include an understanding of and ability to participate in the social and economic changes that will affect their lives. For example, many communities have used planning processes that engage citizens in defining a desired future plan for their community. Using their plan, citizens work to achieve a sustainable future for themselves, their children, and their community.

 

Policy Recommendations and Actions

Although a number of individuals, businesses, government entities, and communities across the nation have taken the task toward sustainability, much more can be done to nurture a sustainable society. To foster awareness, dialogue, and action for sustainability, three policy recommendations are proposed, which address both formal and nonformal educational settings and acknowledge the lifelong nature of education. They also address an array of crosscutting issues that relate to formal and nonformal education alike -- such as technology, partnerships, cultural, and international contexts. Each recommendation is accompanied by specific actions that articulate the necessary partnerships and activities needed for implementation at local, state, and national levels. By exploring successful case studies in which challenges were faced and barriers overcome, strategies and initiatives for implementing action are offered. Together, these suggested recommendations and actions form a comprehensive educational strategy that promises to help lead the nation to a more sustainable future.

Formal Education Reform

Encourage changes in the formal education system to help all students (kindergarten through higher education), educators, and education administrators learn about the environment, the economy, and social equity as they relate to all academic disciplines and to their daily lives.

Action 1. Parents and representatives from states, schools, educational organizations, community groups, businesses, and other education stakeholders should identify the essential skills and knowledge that all students should have at specified benchmark grades for a basic understanding of the interrelationships among environmental, economic, and social equity issues. This set of voluntary standards could serve as a model for states and communities to use in setting their own requirements for academic performance.

Action 2. State officials, school administrators, and other educators and stakeholders should continue to support education reform; emphasize systems thinking and interdisciplinary approaches; and pursue experiential, hands-on learning at all levels, from elementary and secondary schools to universities, colleges, community colleges, and technical schools.

Action 3. Colleges and universities should incorporate education about sustainability into pre-service training and in-service professional development for educators of all types, at all levels, and in all institutions.

Action 4. Schools, colleges, and universities should promote curriculum and community awareness about sustainable development and should follow sustainable practices in school and on campus.

Nonformal Education and Outreach

Encourage nonformal access to information on, and opportunities to learn and make informed decisions about, sustainability as it relates to citizens' personal, work, and community lives.

Action 1. Nonformal educators should encourage lifelong learning about sustainability through adult education programs, community and civic organizations, and nonformal education programs -- such as those sponsored by museums, zoos, nature centers, and 4-H clubs -- so that individuals can make well-informed decisions.

Action 2. Media strategists and sustainable development experts should develop an integrated approach for raising public awareness of and support for sustainability goals, conveying information on indicators of sustainable development, and encouraging people to adopt sustainable decision making in their daily lives.

Action 3. A new or expanded national extension network should be developed to provide needed information to enhance the capacity of individuals and communities to exist sustainably.

Action 4. Local and state governments should continue to extend their partnerships with community organizations and other levels of government to support community sustainability planning processes and periodic assessments.

Action 5. Employers -- in partnership with all levels of government, community organizations, businesses, educational institutions, and others -- should develop training programs to create a workforce with the skills and abilities needed to adapt to changes brought on by the national and global transition to sustainability.

Strengthened Education for Sustainability

Institute policy changes at the federal, state, and local levels to encourage equitable education for sustainability; develop, use, and expand access to information technologies in all educational settings; and encourage understanding about how local issues fit into state, national, and international contexts.

Action 1. Federal, state, and local governments should form partnerships with private sector organizations, businesses, professional societies, educational institutions, and community groups to develop and implement coordinated strategies supporting education for sustainability.

Action 2. The public and private sectors should support the development of and equitable access to enhanced multimedia telecommunications technologies and improved clearinghouse capabilities that promote an understanding of sustainability.

Action 3. Educators in both formal and nonformal learning programs should help students understand the international factors that affect the nation's transition to a sustainable society.

Action 4. Formal and nonformal educators should ensure that education for sustainability invites and involves diverse viewpoints, and that everyone -- regardless of background and origin -- has opportunities to participate in all aspects of the learning process. This will ensure that education for sustainability is enriched by, and relevant to, all points of view.

All educational programmes need to be planned, designed and implemented with a clear reference to the desired target, i.e., the development of key capacities as identified above. In order to facilitate this process, an introduction of an evaluation process in the project cycle of any education programme is encouraged. A number of management tools and instruments are available for this purpose. The Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle is a commonly-used management tool that provides a framework for the improvement of a process or system. The cycle involves a four-step cyclic process consisting of Plan, Do, Check and Act stages, which enables the completion of one turn of one cycle to flow into the beginning of the next. A conceptual chart for the possible application of a PDCA cycle for an educational programme is presented in Fig.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusions and Recommendations

Human resource development is the key to successfully achieving sustainable development, and a range of educational measures, including formal, non-formal and informal education and learning in broad terms is the primary tool to develop the human capacity required for sustainable development. Pertinent practices, including in particular, those in environmental education, are widespread in various forms and efforts are ever expanding and their contribution to sustainable development is demonstrated in a number of cases, mainly at individual, group, community and local levels. However, despite their potential and expectations, the impacts of educational measures on society-wide changes have yet to be demonstrated with substantiated evidence. Considering the critical importance and urgency of realizing the changes for shaping the sustainable future in the region, serious efforts are needed to reorient education policies and programmes and enhance their relevance and effectiveness in contributing to the attainment of sustainable development.

In response to this challenge, four important response principles are emerging globally:

1) Environmental education should readjust its focus from ecological concerns to interlinking relationships among socio-cultural welfare, economic livelihood and environmental quality in a broader agenda of sustainable development. This evolution will help educational initiatives to better address practical solutions to actual environmental problems in the existing socio-cultural and economic conditions and to enhance its relevance to the promotion of sustainable development at the society scale.

2) An integrated approach should be employed to enhance interlinkage and collaboration among educational programmes in different sectors, ranging formal/non-formal education, training and public awareness-raising. The optimum combination of different educational opportunities may be pursued within a perspective of lifelong learning.

3) Appropriate institutional arrangements should be introduced to best support the notion of education for sustainable development. A policy framework strongly addressing a holistic and integrated approach to education for sustainable development and a coordination mechanism involving not only governmental agencies but also all relevant stakeholders should be established at the national level. Governments can play an “enabling role” by introducing a range of innovative policies to facilitate and support the education initiatives and programmes by all stakeholders committed for sustainable development.

4) An effective policy-mix should be employed among educational measures and other policy instruments in the non-education field. Such policy instruments would include regulatory, voluntary and market-based measures. Sustainable development cannot be achieved by education alone. In line with these recommended principles, immediate actions that countries in the region can take are recommended as follows:

A national multi stakeholder process to deal with education for sustainable development should be initiated as a first step to establish a coordinating mechanism for education for sustainable development. The process essentially involves: a) definition and recognition of a broad range of relevant stakeholders for education for sustainable development, including, in particular, representatives of government agencies, schools, universities, education institutions, NGOs, business, religious groups and community- based organizations, b) improvement of communication among those groups, and c) establishment of a national forum or council for multi stakeholder consultation. A media campaign for general sensitization on education for sustainable development would also be conducted to facilitate the process.

Once such an organizational foundation has been put established, the development of a national master plan for education for sustainable development should be undertaken, with the participation of all stakeholders as a prerequisite. This master plan will provide an overall policy framework and action strategy for all stakeholders in the country to join forces to promote their respective activities in an integrated manner towards the attainment of the common goal of sustainable development. It should include definitions of the respective roles of different groups, their commitments and an action agenda to ensure engaging all stakeholders in relevant initiatives and programmes. Proposals on enabling policy measures for promoting such initiatives and programmes may also be addressed in the master plan. In order for governments to appropriately discharge the enabling functions, i.e., formulate and implement a range of enabling policies, and provide appropriate support and necessary resources in facilitating the national multi stakeholder process, an institutional arrangement to ensure a “whole-government” approach should be provided. Such an arrangement should include: a) the securement of a

strong political commitment with top-level leadership, and b) the establishment of a mechanism for inter-ministry coordination on ESD policies and programmes. A core group, such as an inter-ministry task force, should be designated with appropriate authority and responsibility. An important mandate of the core group will be capacity-building for government officials (in all sectors), and reviewing/reorienting existing policy instruments across all ministries concerned, including stocktaking from other international initiatives addressing education issues (Education for All, UN Literacy

Decade, etc.). Particular attention should be paid to government functions in terms of channeling of national/local undertaking with international initiatives, such as regional networking, and with external financial resources.

The United Nations Decade for Education for Sustainable Development, 2005-2014, is very timely as it provides an indispensable opportunity to boost the concerted efforts at national, regional and global levels and mobilize the necessary resources to comprehensively respond to the major challenges of education, public awareness and training in achieving sustainable development that were addressed in the past decade. Nevertheless, the challenges are enormous as education for sustainable development has to meet the broad expectation that it should play a principal role in achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the target year of which has been set in 2015, just after the completion of the decade.

 

References

Agyeman, J., Morris, J. Bishop, J. (1996) Local government’s educational role in LA21 in Huckle, J., Sterling, S. (eds) Education for Sustainability. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

Ali Khan, S. (1996) A vision of a 21st century community learning centre in Huckle, J., Sterling, S. (eds) Education for Sustainability. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

Dodswell, E. (1995) Editorial Our Planet 7 (2) p.2
Fien, J. (1993a) Environmental Education: A Pathway to Sustainability. Deakin University Press, Geelong Australia.

Fien, J. (1993b) Education for the Environment Critical Curriculum Theorising and Environmental Education. Deakin University Press, Geelong Australia.

Fien, J. (1995) (ed) Teaching for a Sustainable World. UNESCO-UNEP, Griffith University, Brisbane Australia.

Fien, J. (1997) Undermining Myths in Environmental Education. Keynote Paper presented at the Annual Conference Australian Association for Environmental Education Hobart, Tasmania.

Hardin, G. (1968) Tragedy of the Commons. Science 162 pp.1243-1248.

Hicks, D., Holden, C. (1995) Exploring the Future: a missing dimension in environmental education. Environmental Education Research 1 (2) 185-194.

Huckle, J. (1996) Realising Sustainability in Changing Times in. Huckle, J., Sterling, S. (eds.) Education for Sustainability. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

Huckle, J., Sterling, S. (eds.) (1996) Education for Sustainability. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

IUCN, UNEP WWF (1980) World Conservation Strategy: Living Resource Conservation for Sustainable Development. IUCN, Gland Switzerland.

IUCN, UNEP WWF (1991) Caring for the Earth: A Strategy for Sustainable Living. IUCN ,UNEP, WWF, Gland Switzerland.

Kainth, Gursharan Singh (2008) Environmental Awareness among School Teachers, ICFAI Journal of Environmental Economics, Vol.7, No. 1, February 2009

Milbrath, L. (1989) Envisioning a Sustainable Society: Learning Our Way Out. Albany State University, New York Press.

Pezzey, J. (1989) Definitions of Sustainability. UK CEED London.
Redclift, M. (1987) Sustainable Development: Exploring the Contradictions. Routledge, London.

Schumacher, F. (1973) Small is Beautiful: Economics as if People Really Mattered. Abacus, London.

Meadows, D., Meadows, D., Randers, J. (1992) Beyond the Limits: Global Collapse or a Sustainable Future. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

Merchant, C. (1980) The Death of Nature: women, ecology and the scientific revolution. Harper and Row, San Francisco.

Reddy, K Purshottam and Reddy D Narsimha( 2003) Environmental Education, Neel Kamal Publication Pvt Ltd., New Delhi

Rees, J. (1990) Natural Resources: Allocation, Economics and Policy (2nd ed). Routledge, London.

Smyth, J. (1995) Environment and education: a view of a changing scene. Environmental Education Research Vol.1 No. 1 pp 3-20.

Sterling, S., EDET Group (1992) Good Earth-Keeping: Education Training and Awareness for a Sustainable Future. Environment Development Education and Training Group, UNEP-UK London.

Sterling, S. (1996) Education in Change, in Huckle, J., Sterling, S. (eds.) Education for Sustainability. Earthscan Publications Ltd, London.

Tilbury, D. (1995) Environmental Education for Sustainability: Defining the new focus of environmental education in the 1990s. Environmental Education Research Vol. 1 No.2 pp.195-212.

Tilbury, D. (1997) Environmental Education and Development Education: teaching geography for a sustainable world in Tilbury, D., Williams, M. (eds) Teaching Geography. Routledge, London pp.93-104.

UNESCO (1992) United Nations Conference on Environment and Development: Agenda 21. UNESCO, Switzerland.

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Dear All,

Greetings !
I deem it a great pleasure to share my ideas and seek your valuable feeback and suggestions. I'm trying to
explore the possibilities of "Creating space for Community Conservation
Initiatives (CCIs) in conventional academics", for which I'm
approaching you to know your opinion.

I'm herewith enclosing a brief note on the above as well as a survey format as an attachment. May I request your kindself to spare some of your valuable time to share your valuable opinions and furnish the
survey format herewith enclosed.

The report of this survey would be shared with international experts at the International Conference on Forestry Education and Research for the Asia-Pacific Region, going to be organized in
Philippines from 23 - 25 November, 2010. (http://uplbcfnr.com/fored.html).

For more details on CCIs kindly visit: http://cciori.org/

There are three formats for students, academicians and for forest department officials. Kindly choose accordingly and furnish the formats. May I request you to mail the furnished formats to kannakumar.siripurapu@gmail.com.

Your feedback is vital for the study and future course of action. Please find the herewith enclosed formats as attachments. Please feel free to write to me for further details. Look forward to receive your feedback.

Regards
Kanna


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Ecological Tales for Environment Education

Environment education is a lifelong process with the objective of inculcating among children a sense of respect and responsibility towards the environment. This education has to start as early as possible.

If we want children to develop love and concern for the environment, we need to invigorate ecology with emotions because only emotions that affect the heart can bring a change of attitudes. One of the best ways to create these attachments and instill ecological values and ethics is to tell stories that impart pro-environmental emotions.

Here are 5 great reasons to use storytelling:

Impart knowledge while entertaining and involving the listener.

Give children a chance to learn in an interesting way about the world around them.

Introduce kids to new concepts.

Enliven any topic and add depth to a lesson.

Give an opportunity for emotional transformation as every story is designed to provide a moral message.

Here are 5 great reasons to use eco-storytelling:

Promote an understanding of the relationship between man and the environment.

Develop awareness and the knowledge necessary for children to become stewards of the earth.

Promote environmental education in school and community.

Bring environmental education to life.

Encourage children to become role models for environmental change.

Here are 5 great reasons to use the Ecological Tales from India series:

# Help children reconnect with Indian traditions: ecology is about going local, eating local grains, planting local fruit trees, dressing with local fabrics, using local resources…

# Revive Indian traditional knowledge systems: India is one of the last big repositories of ecological traditions and has plenty of local skills and expertise in the fields of medicine, water harvesting, forest management, agriculture, animal care, textile, architecture… to share with the world.

# Experience the wisdom of India's traditional people who have always lived in harmony with nature.

# Discover India's biodiversity: wildlife, endemic plants, natural forests…

# Introduce environment education with a new and positive approach: there is more to environment education than tragic apocalyptic figures that leave kids helpless.

The range of titles you will find in the Ecological Tales from India series is simply stunning! In addition to the marvelous selection of wildlife tales, you will find tales from India's tribal villages, colorful arid lands, lush green jungles, mighty sacred rivers, glacial peaks, crowded cities…

With the Ecological Tales from India series, environment education is no longer a boring subject that make kids slump over desks with a strong urge to sleep but one terrific journey around India. Mera Bhaat Mahaan!

To know more about the Ecological Tales from India series, click here

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Dear All,

In general, the international conference aims to strengthen thecontribution of forestry education and research to sustainable forestmanagement in the context of the changing priorities and needs of theAsia Pacific Region.

Specifically, the objectives are:

  • To assess the state of forestry education and research in the Asia-Pacific Region.
  • To identify major issues and challenges confronting the forestry education and research sectors.
  • To initiate the process of charting the future direction of forestry education and research.
Abstract Submission Deadline: September 15, 2010
Notification of Paper Acceptance: September 30, 2010

Please click here to learn more about this conference

http://uplbcfnr.com/fored.html

Regards
Kanna
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