Posts tagged ‘Earth Day 2010’

Crazy Hair and Trash pickup on Earth Day 2010

I have never seen such enthusiasm for picking of trash.

Armed with bags and gloves, I watched 13 Kindergarten and first grade kids pick up the trash around our center with a zeal I could never duplicate. They were unafraid of picking up trash and sought it out.

“I found some,” Sue yelled.

“Me too,” said Joe.

We also made “Crazy Hair” cups. To make them, the kids colored a face on a paper cup. Then, they added dirt and grass seed. Soon, the seed will sprout and grow into hair for the face on the cup. The kids will watch them grow.

I think we need to have Earth Day more often. Instilling environmental ethics into our work year round is important. One of the kids suggested that we collect cans and sell them for money. I think this is a great idea. I’ll keep you posted on that.

In the mean time, please share your Earth Day lessons. I’d love to hear from you.

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April 23, 2010 at 3:17 am Leave a comment

Earth Day at 40: Where do Kids fit in?

Celebrating success is a good thing and the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day proved a big cause for celebration. Earth Day at 40: Valuing Wisconsin’s Environmental Traditions, Past, Present and Future, sponsored by the Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at UW-Madison, honored Gaylord Nelson, a Wisconsin native and the founder of Earth Day, and the many Wisconsin citizens who played a part in making Earth Day a success. It was fascinating to learn about the history of earth day and great to see old friends and classmates from my grad school days at UW-Madison.

But where do kids fit into this event? Since this was more of a historical and policy focused event, I had to look and listen to find the connections. There were a few covert statements made about kids, but no seminars explicitly about kids .

None-the-less, I heard many inspiring stories at the conference.

John Francis gave a talk about the 17 years that he chose not to speak and the 22 years he chose not to use motorized transportation in protest of an oil spill in San Francisco. He’s developing a K-12 curriculum called Planetlines for kids. You can read more about him at www.planetwalker.org.

I also heard from Tia Nelson, Gaylord Nelson’s daughter. She’s an environmental activist and said she was going to a teach-in at the Governor’s Mansion with 4th Graders for Earth Day. She mentioned that her dad was passionate about education and helped pass the Environmental Education Act that ensured national leadership for K-12 environmental education efforts.

I saw a former professor, Bud Jordahl, a member of the Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame (www.wchf.org). He was influential in that first Earth Day and worked closely with Gaylord Nelson in the 1960s. His accomplishments are many and you can read about them at www.wchf.org. I’m grateful that he completely supports getting kids outside.

I learned that the first “E-day” in Madison in 1970 was organized in part by former Mayor Paul Soglin and many other young people (Soglin was just 26). It’s important to remember what a few dedicated young people can do.

To encourage more diversity in the environmental movement — I saw just two African-American and a handful of other minorities at the conference — The Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies has just launched a community scholars program to encourage under represented students to pursue environmental careers. I look forward to seeing the fruits of that labor in years to come.

So, for  conference with little talk about kids, I still came away inspired and ready to do more work.

Hopefully, some of my students will become environmentalists or at the very least conscientious citizens and park users. My job is to get kids outside so that they know the places that are worth preserving.  That’s the message of Earth Day… to care for the planet and protect it. That starts at home with local parks and natural areas. While all my students know about Earth Day, it’s another thing to get them connected to the earth in meaningful ways. My job is to help them make those connections by taking them to beautiful places. Hopefully, they’ll fall in love with these places and keep coming back.

It’s that simple. People protect what they love.

What are you doing this Earth Day to encourage kids to love the planet?  Write and let me know.

Get an email subscription (go to home page) and receive my Bubble Activity Guide. It’s full of inexpensive activities to do with kids.

April 23, 2010 at 2:33 am Leave a comment


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Get Kids Outside

Diane Schwartz


Welcome to Get Kids Outside. I'm glad you're here because that means you are interested in kids and playing outside. If you like what you see please "like" it. If you have comments, please leave them. If you don't like something, let me know that too. I appreciate my readers.

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