Principles of Environmental Education

EE-Link Home Member Login Contact Us About Us News Jobs
Promoting Excellence in Environmental Education

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

  Site Stats:
  5814 EE Links
  6225 EE Programs
  3711 EE Orgs
  3400 EE Contacts
  732 EE Events

Environmental Education practice in the United States is defined by these characteristics (excerpted from Defining Environmental Education, a unit in the EE Toolbox):

• EE incorporates a human component in exploring environmental problems and their solutions.

Environmental solutions are not only scientific--they include historical, political, economic and cultural perspectives. This also implies that the environment includes buildings, highways and ocean tankers as well as pine trees and coyotes.

EE rests on a foundation of knowledge about social and ecological systems.

• Knowledge lays the groundwork for analyzing environmental problems, resolving conflicts, and preventing new problems from arising.

• EE includes the affective domain: the attitudes, values, and commitments necessary to build a sustainable society.

The role for educators in addressing the affective domain is not always easy. Educators should make it clear that differing personal values exist, that these values can color the facts, and that controversy is often motivated by differing value systems.

EE includes opportunities to build skills that enhance learners’ problem-solving abilities, such as:

• Communication: listening, public speaking, persuasive writing, graphic design;

• Investigation: survey design, library research, interviewing, data analysis;

• Group process: leadership, decision making, cooperation

Get EE-News

Want to know what's new on EE-Link? Subscribe to the newsletter! ... more

Check out our Jobs Service!

Search for a job. Submit a job. Get the weekly report. ... more


We want to hear from you!

Please take a moment to complete this brief survey about our Web site ... more

Join Now!