Attempts have been made in the past to recognise environmental education. To take an excerpt or two from The Environmental Curriculum written by the NAEE, the breakthrough came in 1990 when it was introduced as a cross-curricular theme. However, when the national curriculum was reviewed in 1994 the revised version no longer made any explicit reference to the subject.
In 2000, Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) was introduced as a non-statutory element of the curriculum. This was followed in 2006 by the launch of the Government's Sustainable School's Strategy (S3), which encouraged schools to follow environmental topics in order to become completely sustainable by 2020, (that’s next year, and just look at how far away we are from that.) S3 was scrapped by the education secretary in 2010.
Since the national curriculum was further streamlined in 2014, there is still no explicit reference to environmental education and this is where we are at with things today.
The reason From The Ground met David Drew is because we want environmental education to be added as a core subject to the national curriculum for all key stages. With backing from David, advice about how that goal can be achieved and gaining local support from schools and environmental groups, much progress can be made.
There are three interrelated components of environmental education, (words taken from The Environmental Curriculum written by the NAEE):
Education IN the environment
The 'hands-on' element which uses the children's immediate surroundings and the wider world as a learning resource.
Education ABOUT the environment
Developing knowledge and understanding about the environment should begin with an awareness of the local environment and then expand to an understanding of global environmental issues.
Education FOR the environment
The development of positive attitudes and behaviours towards the environment. This can only be effective if the other two elements are in place.
Within the subject of environment, suggested statutory topics could include the following:
1. Climate change
2. Over population
3. Intensive farming and GM food
4. Natural disasters
5. Environmental degradation
6. Pollution (plastic and ocean waste)
7. Sustainability
8. Conservation
9. Resource depletion (habitat loss)
10. Recycling
11. Environmental law
In addition, we also want school gardening to be made statutory within the national curriculum framework and legislation put in place making it compulsory for all schools to adopt their own independent, environmental code.