Natural Collaborations
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Originally appears in the Spring 2019 issue.
A DOZEN TEACHERS GATHER around a lunch table with a view overlooking the city, sharing stories of nature-based learning. Hawks circle outside the eleventh-floor window as the group takes a break from their busy morning to eat and chat. Their conversation turns to how to get their classes outside considering it’s the first thing students want, but the last thing their parents want them to do. “I had sent home a note to all of my students’ families,” one teacher explains, “letting them know that we would be learning outside every day, and to send their children in clothes that can get dirty. Most of my parents are on board with going outside, so when I had a student come to school one day dressed head-to-toe in white and nothing to change into, we had no choice — out we went! That boy was caked in mud, and I’d never seen him smile more than he did that day.”
The teachers laugh, and one asks with a knowing smile, “And how did his parents react when they saw his clothes?”
“Oh, they weren’t happy,” she says with a chuckle, “but I asked them, was it more important that their son came home clean but bored, or dirty and having learned a lot?” The group nods heartily in response, sipping coffee from reusable mugs. As teachers committed to Environmental Education (EE), this is one of the challenges they face on a regular basis. Navigating competing priorities in the curriculum, a lack of emphasis on environmental literacy, and sometimes the pitfalls of a muddy pair of pants, are all discussion points for this strong and passionate group.
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