PBS ‘National Parks’ now a rich digital education site
October 6th, 2009 · No Comments
From Green Right Now Reports
Digital media resources from Ken Burns’ acclaimed documentary series The National Parks: America’s Best Idea, including on-demand video, lessons plans, student activities, and historical archives, are now available through the PBS Teachers web portal.
The site includes preK-12 educational services and a searchable library of more than 9,000 local and national standards-based instructional resources.
Tags: · Ken Burns, The National Parks: America's Best Idea
At Greenhill School, ‘green’ thinking is becoming the way of life
September 24th, 2009 · No Comments
By Tom Kessler
ADDISON, Texas (ADDISONGREEN.INFO) — When you have the word “green” in your school name, it’s probably safe to assume that environmental awareness is top of mind. That’s exactly the case at Addison’s Greenhill School, a coeducational private day school with more than 1,200 students in pre-kindergarten through grade 12.
Over the last four years, the school’s Green Team — composed of parents and faculty — has led a series of sustainability initiatives that are truly putting the green in Greenhill. School leaders have looked for ways to make the school a more sustainable place and to promote eco-friendly habits in the students. >> Read the full story
Tags: · Addison, Community Gardens, Greenhill School
EarthEcho to launch national learning project in US schools
September 24th, 2009 · No Comments
From Green Right Now Reports
EarthEcho International, a nonprofit environmental education and youth leadership organization working to restore and protect our water planet, today announced a program that aims to involve millions of U.S. middle and high school students.
The Water Planet Challenge program, announced during the Clinton Global Initiative fifth annual meeting in New York, intends to foster tomorrow’s conservation leaders. EarthEcho says the program will fill a critical need in America’s classrooms, where it sees a lack unified ocean and fresh water systems education and service-learning content.
Tags: · Clinton Global Initiative, EarthEcho International, The Water Planet Challenge
Digging into nature in air-conditioned comfort
July 3rd, 2009 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Green Right Now
Somewhere in between the sleep-away camps, beach excursions and baseball games of summer, kids and parents alike generally see the appeal of the sand-free floors and refrigerated air of a good museum. Institutions across the country know this is a great time to squeeze some education into kid-friendly, entertaining exhibitions; here’s a list of some of the best nature-oriented attractions for vacationers who’ve felt a bit too much heat this month.
Tags: · American Museum of Natural History, Audubon Insectarium, Chicago, Cockrell Butterfly Center, Exploratorium, Houston, museum exhibits, Museum of Natural Science, Museum of Science and Industry, nature exhibits, New Orleans, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC
Middle school state finalists named in green community competition
May 5th, 2009 · No Comments
From Green Right Now Reports
Twenty-two teams of U.S. middle school students have been named state finalists in the inaugural Siemens We Can Change the World Challenge, in which the students were asked to “go green” by creating and implementing environmental change in their local communities. Two national winning teams and one grand prize-winning team will be chosen and announced on May 18.
More than 2,000 students participated in the Siemens We Can Change the World Challenge and state finalist projects covered topics such as e-waste recycling, ecosystem restoration and water conservation. The Siemens Foundation partnered with Discovery Education and National Science Teachers Association on the competition, which will expand to elementary schools in 2009 and to high schools in 2010.
Tags: · Discovery Education, National Science Teachers Association, Siemens Foundation partnered, Siemens We Can Change the World Challenge
Ten ways to celebrate Earth Day with (or without) kids
April 15th, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler and Harriet Blake
Green Right Now
As Earth Day approaches, one of the most significant things you can do is to help a child celebrate nature and embrace a greener lifestyle. Here are ten ideas for creating a fun and meaningful Earth Day celebration.
Get outdoors and enjoy a snack with the squirrels and ants. To really get the most out of this, take your favorite kid(s) to the market in preparation and let them search out local healthy foods. Even young kids can participate, choosing the apples, veggies and cheeses they want to include. So introduce them to the farmer’s market or local foods section of your neighborhood grocery. Look for organic and lower your impact by using reusable dinnerware and plates, or biodegradable paper plates.
Tags: · Association of Zoos and Aquariums, Bicycle Club of Philadelphia, Bikely.com, Biking, Bronx Zoo, celebration, CG Kidz.com, Cynergreen, Danelle Hofer, Denver Aquarium, Disneynature, earth, Earth Day, Earth Day Network, Free Trees and Plants.com, Greenleaf Gardens, GreenRightNow, How to Grow More Vegetables, Lincoln Park Zoo, Local Food, Los Angeles Zoo, National Gardening Association, New York Cycle Club, Paul Fleischman, Phoenix Metro Bicycle Club, picnic, Reid Park Zoo, Riley Hofer, Russell Greenleaf, Seedfolks, The Ballad of Thoreau, Toledo Area Bicyclists
Camp Green, learning to cherish the Earth while having a blast
April 9th, 2009 · No Comments
By Sommer Saadi
Green Right Now
Want to spend the summer restoring a wildlife habitat on the Dolores River? There is a camp for that. Or would you prefer learning first-hand how to cultivate a thriving organic farm? There is a camp for that, too.
With more than 5,000 overnight camps and more than 1,400 teen tours across the nation, there is a camp to suit the interests of almost every child. But we’re not talking basic glue noodles to paper, play tether ball and call-it-a-day sort of camps. We’re talking traveling the world, adapting to foreign cultures, nurturing wildlife and embracing conservation.
And the best part is these summer options are incorporating green practices and green teachings into every aspect of their programs.
Tags: · Broadreach, California, Camp Ocean Pines, Choice Camps, Colorado Rockies, Deer Hill Expeditions, Raleigh, summer camps, sustainability, Windsor Mountain, Windsor N.H., World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms
Google Earth heads to sea
February 4th, 2009 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Green Right Now
Google has a way of attracting attention, whether it’s by upending cell phone paradigms with an open-source platform or frightening publishers with its quest to digitize every book ever written. Now environmental groups have reason to hope one of the search giant’s projects will raise eco-consciousness among people who spend more time playing with the latest techie fad than they do reading conservationist pamphlets.
Tags: · Google Earth, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Snow and Ice Data Center, Oceans
Pennies for the Planet kicks off 2009 program
January 20th, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Audubon has announced that its ongoing Pennies for the Planet project will support three specific conservation efforts in 2009.
The projects are:
- Project Puffin and the Seabird Restoration Program off the Maine coast. The Puffins have been restored to the island after once being driven off by hunters, but they must be protected as scientists learn more about how to save seabirds.
- Four Holes Swamp, an ancient swamp that supports otters, owls and rare plants in South Carolina as well as cypress trees that are hundreds of years old. Alligators and rare bats live in this soggy setting. Parts of the swamp are protected, but more land could be preserved.
- Wyoming’s “sagebrush sea,” an endangered habitat for pygmy rabbits, sage-grouse and pronghorns. Scientists are working to reclaim some of this area, to help save the native species, like the pronghorns, from being pushed aside by development and agriculture.
Tags: · alligators, Four Holes Swamp, National Audubon Society, Pennies for the Planet, pronghorn antelope, Puffins, sagebrush, seabirds, Wyoming
Forget the candy bars: Green school fund-raisers are hot
January 9th, 2009 · No Comments
By Melissa Segrest
Green Right Now
They’ve sold the candy bars. They’ve sold the wrapping paper. Perhaps they’ve even sold cookie dough (not healthy) or had car washes (not good during droughts). The problem with typical school fund-raisers is that the kids just end up selling more stuff – at a time when the world could benefit from a little less stuff.
Thus, a green wave of school fund-raising efforts has washed across the country, and companies are springing up to meet that demand. Eco-friendly firms will provide everything from stainless steel water bottles to fair-trade T-shirts, energy-efficient light bulbs to recycled wrapping paper as alternative, Earth-friendly ways of raising money.
No small number of them were launched by environmentally sensitive parents who didn’t like what they saw their kids selling to friends and family.
Tags: · CFLs, Free-trade products, Green Schools Initiative, Recycled electronics, Recycled gift wrap
No Child Left Inside Gaining Momentum
June 2nd, 2008 · No Comments
You’ve heard of No Child Left Behind. Now comes a new program with serious educational goals, but a different approach: No Child Left Inside proposes to re-invigorate environmental education by tapping into kids’ innate curiosity about nature. And communities across America are embracing the fresh, bottom-up concept by holding No Child Left Inside events.
Tags: · Congress, Providence, Rhode Island, Schools, The No Child Left Inside Act
Worms: They Eat Garbage and Don’t Complain
September 29th, 2007 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Worms. These lower invertebrates have gotten such a bad rap. No one really gives them a thought, except that organic gardeners know they’ve got good soil when they see plenty of worms at work aerating and fertilizing it.
For the uninitiated, worms can be your best friend when it comes to reducing household [...]
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