Environmental Education for Louisiana Youth
Piney Woods Submissions -- 2016
The future of Louisiana’s
natural environment depends on the awareness, caring, and responsiveness of
younger state residents. The environmental movement of the 1960s and 70s saw
the creation of the EPA and Clean Air and Clean Water Acts, and this concern for
resource conservation and sustainability has continued and intensified for
many. Youth organizations such as the Boy Scouts, FFA, and 4-H, have long
fostered aspects of environmental learning and skill development. Many parents,
also, have had a huge role in passing on these values and knowledge to their
children.
Public and private schools certainly shape the environmental
literacy and commitment of students through their curricula and courses in basic
biology and other sciences. The extent to which these academic courses really
promote student environmental values and knowledge is a function of individual
teaching excellence and a variety of school resources that can help teachers
attract student attention and stimulate their imaginations. Learning is often
enhanced when students can work together in outdoor settings and can bounce
questions and viewpoints off one another and teachers. If we could visit
individual primary, middle, and secondary schools in this state, it probably
wouldn’t take us that long to determine which schools and classes were really
stimulating a lot of student interest, interaction and involvement.
Our
public and private sectors have key roles to play in encouraging and supporting
environmental education in our schools. The Louisiana Environmental Education
Commission (LEEC), under the direction of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife
and Fisheries (LDWF) has held symposia, provided educational programming for
students and teachers, and given awards and grants to public and private
schools. LEEC grants are awarded annually to individual and team educators in
K-12 grade schools as well as to post-graduate university researchers. Part of
the LEEC’s role is also to publicize schools that have had exemplary student
programs and achievements. A recent and specific initiative of LEEC along these
lines of encouragement and recognition is the Green Schools Program. These
programs are designed to reduce negative environmental impacts and costs,
improve public health and wellness, and promote effective environmental and
sustainability education. Its Green School Grants, up to a maximum of $5000,
support projects that further the mission and goals of the U.S. Department of
Education’s Green Ribbon Schools Program.
Green School grant recipients
in 2015 included KIPP Central City Primary (New Orleans), Arthur F. Smith Middle
Magnet School (Alexandria), St. Martin’s Episcopal School (Metairie), and Nesom
Middle School (Tickfaw). Westdale Heights Academic Magnet School (Baton Rouge),
Benjamin Franklin High School (New Orleans), and Baton Rouge Magnet High School
were selected as Green Ribbon School Honorees in 2016, the first such
recognition for Louisiana Schools. Brian Gautreau, appointed last year as Green
Schools Coordinator, commented that there had been relatively less headway made
so far in discovering exemplary environmental education programs in north
Louisiana schools. Exceptions do exist, though, such as at West Ouachita High
School. The West Ouachita FFA chapter in West Monroe was awarded a $2,000 grant
in 2015 from the national FFA organization for its service-learning sustainable
recycling project.
The future of environmental education in Louisiana
faces challenges, including current state budgetary concerns and perhaps less
funding for these and other worthwhile state programs. One way that outdoor
enthusiasts can help at least a little is to purchase the specialty state
vehicle license plate for environmental education. Purchase helps to fund
grants for educators and students, the annual Environmental Education State
Symposium, and other programs designed to further environmental knowledge and
stewardship in Louisiana. The Office of Motor Vehicles can be contacted at
1-225-925-6146 to ask for the Environmental Education Plate and obtain a quote,
or secured online at https://expresslane.dps.louisiana.gov/SpecialPlatesPublic/SpecialPlates1.aspx.
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