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Integrating climate change to Ethiopian curriculum |
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The issue of climate change has been on the news for a long time. These days, it is would be fair to say that everyone has heard a thing or two about climate change and how it affects our day to day life. However, when it comes to real education, the integration of climate change into the curriculum of the Ethiopian education system has a long way to go. It is always a wonder to see children coloring pictures of trees and singing in nursery schools listening to poets and stories from students in primary school and hearing about innovative ideas from high school students. Yet, when it comes to raising awareness of environmental conservation, students in Ethiopia have little to say. This is because the curriculum they have been taught gives little if not none emphasis on issues like environmental conservation and climate change. The danger of not educating the young generation about environmental protection is severe in a way that it creates a generation that considers climate change to be a myth and nothing more than a conspiracy theory. This danger could even be catastrophic in a poor country like Ethiopia where the catastrophes that are caused due to climate change can do a whole lot of irreversible damage to the wellbeing of the general public. Almost all Ethiopian children grow up watching their parents cut trees for the purpose of cooking, deforest lands for the purpose of farming and pollute rivers for the purpose of dumping waste. Unless there is a concrete curriculum that has the framework to educate children and youth on climate change, it will be difficult to refute the existing backward indifference to climate change in Ethiopia. There are a number of countries from which Ethiopia can learn how to incorporate climate change to its education system. Countries like the USA, Canada and a number of other European countries have managed to successfully incorporate the issue of climate change to their educational system at all levels. Ethiopia also needs to do the same to combat climate change effectively. The best curriculum to educate young students about climate change is the one that states the facts, but also gives clear directions to the solutions. Such curriculum will encourage students at all levels to seek innovative ways to combat climate change. Children must understand the benefit of having a clean life and living in an environment with reduced greenhouse gases and there no better way to do so other than integrating issues related to climate change to the overall curriculum. Considering the importance of this topic, Eco-generation in Ethiopia will host an event on JULY 25 2016 to promote the theme ?Climate change education for a better future? with selected children and youth. The event will be participatory and interactive among the attendees.
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5 Comments
Olansis, I agree with you that current cirriculums are too weak in awakening environmental awareness. There should be outdoors classes that enable children to feel the refreshment the Earth gives. That will be more effective than just teaching children why it is important to protect our environment. Thanks for your report and have a great day!
Posted 09-06-2016 18:25
Other nations should take similar steps to make sure that they inculcate the need to improve and conserve our environment from a very young age. Thanks for sharing
Posted 06-06-2016 17:16
Thanks for your idea and insight Olansis! I'm on the same page with you for this one! There should be more education on the environment in school. Also, I think it is best to teach what is nature, not only by the school books but to go into the woods and feel it! Just like the fact the kids with pets develop sensitivity to other living things, it would help them to grow overall sensitivity to nature. Thanks for your report!
Posted 06-06-2016 10:20
Here in my country, emphasis is given in learning languages, most likely because it would add more to the qualified workforce constituting the backbone of the large Philippine diaspora. We devote time not just to Filipino and English, but also to our native languages. the K-12 curriculum recently expanded to incorporate French, Spanish and Bahasa Indonesia/Malaysia but the gov stays silent on environment/earth science except in specialized schools. This is insightful and a nice read
Posted 05-06-2016 08:34
You are right , it is very important that younger generation is aware of the threat environment has today and the role everyone has to play to protect environment. Integrating 'climate change' to curriculum is the best way to nurture green generation. 'Climate change education for a better future' is a great step. Thanks for sharing.
Posted 05-06-2016 03:27