Check out the eastern water skink (Zavier’s Amazing Animals)
Expanding the Roots & Shoots model into formal education
As our research shows, there’s a strong evidence base for this. The free-choice project-based learning approach can be integrated into the curriculum on sustainable development. This would enable students to solve real-world environmental and social challenges.
The students could take part in a project for a single school term or a whole year, in the following way:
1) select a Sustainable Development Goal and topic of inquiry (such as a specific local environmental or social justice issue) of their choice, based on personal interest and curiosity
2) conduct self-directed research into potential solutions
3) tap into the expertise of local community leaders, Indigenous elders, older students, teachers and peers
4) implement the project and report back to the class about their impact
5) celebrate their success and learn from each other at a suitable forum, such as an open day or community exhibit.
Technology such as multimedia resources, online discussion forums and virtual field trips can also support the curriculum.
Step-by-step approach to implementing the Roots & Shoots program in the classroom
A lasting legacy
Young people will inherit the Earth. Their education must include developing skills to tackle the challenges they will surely face. This goes beyond learning about abstract concepts such as deforestation in the Amazon and climate change in Antarctica.
Nothing beats first-hand experience of developing and implementing practical solutions. Imagine the benefits of restoring a local ecosystem to witness the return of birdlife during the course of their schooling? Or making recycled toys for refuge dogs.
Last month we celebrated Goodall’s 90th birthday. I can’t think of a better way to honour her evolving legacy than to embed her Roots & Shoots model in our classrooms. It can be so much more than a nice-to-have extracurricular activity, enjoyed by a select few.
The author would like to acknowledge fellow Dear World co-editors, Nila Taylor and Benjamin Howes, and the 18 contributors who shared their stories for the book. Thanks also to Sakshi Srivastava for her comments on the draft of this article.
Mahima Kalla, Digital Health Transformation Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Main Image from Roots and Shoots Australia