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Sustainable Oregon Schools Initiative is a project of the Zero Waste Alliance, a program of the International Sustainable Development Foundation

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Early Childhood and Sustainability


Recently someone wrote us to ask why we did not include Pre-K in our "K-12 schools" mission.  Is Pre-K any less worthy when they are housed in the same building as Kindergarten, First, and Second-graders? he asked us.  So here at SOSI we got thinking.  We asked each other and we asked our Steering Committee what we should do about this.  Do we change our website to now say "Pre-K-12?"  It just didn't seem feasible.  

But what I can offer is some validated research (and my perspective) on the matter.  Here is what other's have to say about sustainability in Early Childhood.  Any further thoughts are inspired and/or credited to "The contribution of early childhood education to a sustainable society," edited by Ingrid Pramling Samuelsson and Yoshie Kaga, published by UNESCO-France in 2008.  
(or found here: www.ecdgroup.com/docs/lib_005710328.pdf)

There are several things to note:
  1. Importance of local relevance:  young children especially need locality in order to create meaning and relevance. 
  2. Education for sustainable development should start in early childhood as that is where we develop the values and core beliefs that shape the rest of our lives. 
  3. Some educators fear that teaching young children about sustainability opens them up to the "doom and gloom" of our potential future.  But this is not necessarily true.  It also means making sure children play outdoors and discover the beauty of nature.  It means helping children understand that we are all inter-connected (ie: intercultural education).  And it means using the 7 R's (this is the first time I have actually heard this one!): reduce, reuse, recycle, respect, repair, reflect, and refuse.  
While I admit to having not read the entire paper (it is over 100 pages long..) what I do gather from it is that yes, sustainability in early childhood education is important.  But what we do here at SOSI can often be transferred to the ECE practices.  It is entirely possible to take the SOSI website and make it relate to our youngest students.  For example, (and this comes from the resources section of our website) food offered in schools must support student health, limit the use of toxic chemicals on the grass our students play, and the air in which they breathe, and the schools & community should operate as an integrated whole.  

 So while we will not be changing our website and flyers to specifically say "pre-K" or "pre-school" we do not intend by any means to leave this out.  Our children are our future and we support any efforts of those working towards sustainability in early childhood.  

Topic for Discussion: 
Perhaps what we can do is this:  If you are an early childhood learning center and your school has done a significant job in educating your students, teachers, parents and/or community about sustainability, send us your School Story.  A template can be found by going to www.sustainableschools.org/action/stories.htm   We are happy to share your success on our website!  
 

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Sarie,

Well put. Being one who immediately rejected the notion of widening SOSI's self-imposed scope your post made me pause to reconsider. Ultimately, I still believe that, given the current state of affairs it is enough to ask SOSI to keep a more concentrated focus on K-12, even while --as you write -- the resources, philosophy, and people at SOSI can just as easily be applied to early childhood education.

In terms of highlighting a place that is doing it, I can think of two. I know less about Opal, housed at the Children's Museum, but know that it fits your descriptor relatively well. I am more intimately aware of Gladstone's Center for Children and Families. The center, housed in an old Thriftway grocery/pharmacy, is sustainable all the way around, from materials selected, reusing an existing structure, bringing myriad resources to bear on the town's least capable citizens (the young children), to developing sustainable partnerships with multiple agencies dedicated to social equity issues.
Finally, Stand for Children is an organization that has grown from the vision of a uniquely talented leader over the course of a decade to become a leading voice for social justice for young children.

Thanks for blogging -- you write well.