SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 54
Fall Focus on Books
GROWING UP GREEN
A Clean Sky: The Global Warming Story. Robyn C. Friend and
Judith Love Cohen. Cascade Pass, Marina del Rey, CA,
2007. 48 pp., illus. $13.95 (ISBN 9781880599822 cloth).
The Down-to-Earth Guide to Global Warming. Laurie David and
Cambria Gordon. Scholastic, New York, 2007.
128 pp., illus. $15.99 (ISBN 9780439024945 paper).
The Forever Forest: Kids Save a Tropical Treasure. Kristin Joy
Pratt-Serafini and Rachel Crandell. Dawn Publications,
Nevada City, CA, 2008. 32 pp., illus. $16.95 (ISBN
9781584691013 doth).
How We Know What We Know about Our Changing Climate:
Scientists and Kids Explore Global Warming. Lynne
Cherry and Gary Braasch. Dawn Publications, Nevada City, CA,
2008.66 pp., illus. $17.95 (ISBN 9781584691037 cloth).
One Well: The Story of Water on Earth. Rochelle Strauss. Kids
Can Press, Tonawanda, NY, 2007. 32 pp., illus. $17.95
(ISBN 9781553379546 cloth).
The Sky's Not Falling! Why It's OK to Chill about Global
Warming. Holly Fretyvell. World Ahead Publishing, Los
Angeles, 2007. 128 pp., illus. $10.99 (ISBN 9780976726944
paper).
Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean
Motion. Loree Griffin Burns. Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
2007. 64 pp., illus. $18.00 (ISBN 9780618581313 cloth).
E nvironmental conservation andglobal warming are two of the
hottest topics in science today, and
among the hottest resources for chil-
dren are the following new titles,
which target various age groups but
have a common goal of developing
environmental consciousness in our
kids. These books range from providing
a basic understanding of environmental
issues to showcasing a specific aspect of
our environment that needs focused
consideration. The books are meant to.
stir awareness by using the full gamut
of motivational techniques, from soft
cliché to hard statistic. Their goal is to
fuel motivation, some by suggesting
tried and true conservation practices,
and others by leaning more heavily on
scientific evidence and the evaluation
of it. And with one exception, they serve
as seeds for planting the idea of growing
up "green."
Water conservation
The idea of water as a valuable resource
and the related issues of water access,
pollution, and depletion are thought-
fully discussed in One Well: The Story of
Water on Earth (ages 9 to 14). Author
Rochelle Strauss, an environmental
education consultant based in Toronto,
focuses the reader on the importance
of water conservation by using the anal-
ogy of one global well. Renowned artist
If we want our future citizens to make well-
informed decisions about issues related to
the environment, then we need to ensure that
. scientifically accurate, nonbiased sources of
information are available to them.
Rosemary Woods illustrates in rich
detail the concept of water as the strand
of life that connects everything on Earth.
The book is filled with facts and per-
centages, but the statistics are paired
with easy-to-understand descriptions
of tangible objects that readers can wrap
their heads around. Toward the end of
the book are notes to parents and teach-
ers; this is a well-written section that
provides helpful ideas, not strident
ultimatums, for water conservation.
Once children learn about the multiple
roles of water in sustaining life, they
will be more inclined to view this
resource as worthy of protection.
Furthermore, once they are imbued with
a global sense of community, they may
be more inclined to view themselves
as having their own responsible roles.
Ocean pollution
The ultimate reservoir of Earth's water
is the ocean, and ocean pollution is the
cornerstone of Tracking Trash: Flotsam,
Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion
(ages 10 to 14). The collaborative efforts
of three scientists to "track trash"
through their understanding of wave
dynamics, ecological interactions, and
biodégradation make the book part
data analysis and part detective story.
Readers gain insight into climate pat-
terns and the variability, of ocean cur-
rents, which can lead to better pollution
prevention techniques and easier
cleanup efforts.
First-time author Loree Griffin Burns
also discusses an important aspect of
ocean pollution: plastics. Her description
of the ubiquitous contamination of
ocean water with plastic materials, and
the resulting threat to marine life, con-
stitutes a valuable lesson in responsible
management of trash. Through the use
of scientific supporting evidence, the
book further illustrates how damaging
the use of plastics can be to the environ-
ment. Burns traces the effects of pol-
luted ocean waters and shows how these
ultimately lead to changes in our cli-
mate and to serious consequences for
marine biodiversity. The glossary is
helpful since several technical terms are
used, and a list of other books and Web
resources is also included at the end of
the book.
884 BioScience • October 2008 / Vol. 58 No. 9 www.
biosciencemag.org
Fall Focus on Books
Rainforests and species protection
The concept of conservation is often
demonstrated through efforts that begin
locally, but children may also be inspired
to participate in conservation efforts by
reading about an exotic place in Costa
Rica called the Children's Eternal Rain-
forest. This 54,000-acre reserve is the
backdrop to the story of The Forever
Forest: Kids Save a Tropical Treasure (ages
5 to 11). Well known children's author
Kristin Joy Pratt-Serafini collaborated
with author and rainforest conserva-
tionist Rachel Crandell to highlight the
significance of the rainforest ecosystem
and to send an effective message that
the determined actions of children all
over the world can be relevant to even
large-scale preservation projects. The
story is well crafted, full of information,
and beautifully enhanced by illustra-
tions. Readers learn that the rainforest
provides the habitat for numerous
species that face extinction as their food
webs are disrupted and forest area is
reduced by logging and other intrusive
human activities. Species protection
through reforestation is paramount, and
by explaining the importance of these
unique tropical forest dwellers in their
habitat, the authors are promoting
environmental awareness at a young
age, which Pratt-Serafini states is "the key
to preserving our world."
Large-scale conservation efforts, such
as protecting an ecosystem as wide as the
ocean or as complex as the rainforest, are
under way throughout the world. Edu-
cational outreach programs for children
are excellent ways to emphasize the
important work that volunteers do and
to develop children's commitment to
protect natural habitats.
Global warming
Growing environmental concern has
recently spiked as a result of our grad-
ual understanding and acknowledgment
of global warming. The term itself has
become part of the lexicon in both
scientific and political arenas. Major
socioeconomic decisions affecting not
just the United States but the world have
already been made, and will increas-
ingly be made, on the basis of judg-
ments about global warming. The topic
is rife with controversy. Nonetheless, an
introduction to global warming for chil-
dren can take a direct and scientific
approach. A Clean Sky: The Clobal
Warming Story (ages 9 to 12) does just
that. It is an appealing 48-page primer
on global warming that young readers
will enjoy. The book provides an objec-
tive understanding of a complex issue
without adopting political overtones.
Robyn C. Eriend and Judith Love Cohen
Although the issues of global warming and
conservation may always be subject to
interpretation and political bias, these topic's in
children's literature should be presented as
objectively as any piece of scientific information.
I
(an aerospace engineer) are accom-
plished writers of children's books on a
variety of empowering subjects. Their
approach to global warming is to discuss
it from a can-do perspective: first ex-
plain the nature of the problem— how
does global warming take place over
time?—and then offer some possible
solutions to fix it. Eor example, the
term "greenhouse gases" is adequately
defined along with the need to curb
emissions, then terminology such as
"carbon capture" and "geological stor-
age" is introduced as alternative meth-
ods for reducing greenhouse gases. The
result is a book that is both rational and
engaging—optimism served objectively.
Documented evidence
of climate change
Another approach to understanding
global warming is to learn about the
work being done by an international
selection of scientists. Evidence-based
knowledge of global climate change is
the focus of the book How We Know
What We Know about Our Changing
Climate: Scientists and Kids Explore
Clobal Warming (ages 10 to 14). Studies
by more than 40 biologists, as well as
student researchers, are documented
in this collection of evidence that
climate change is real, and that plants
and animals are reacting to it. Through
clear descriptions of actual scientific
studies, a young reader absorbs clues
that are symptoms of global warming—
rainforest deforestation, rising sea levels,
and changing carbon dioxide levels, to
name a few. Lynne Cherry, an accom-
plished writer of environmental books,
and photojournalist Gary Braasch
teamed up to write this book, which not
only presents a convincing argument,
although its advocacy is subtle, but also
illustrates the collaborative spirit of
scientific research that is required to
further our understanding of the long-
ranging effects of global warming.
Science, after all, is about asking
questions, exploring problems, and
searching for adequate answers that
cannot always be found in a classroom
or textbook. This book encourages
scientific curiosity and takes a multi-
disciplinary approach to learning about
our environment. Additional resources
are plentiful. Instead of waving the
banner of environmental consciousness.
How We Know demonstrates ways to
take active roles in the community to
solve a problem that affects all of us.
Activism
In comparison. The Down-to-Earth
Cuide to Clobal Warming (ages 9 to 12)
highlights the importance of environ-
mental awareness and describes ways
for young readers to become engaged in
conservation efforts. The premise is
that peer-reviewed studies have already
identified solutions to global warming;
therefore, the task at hand is to become
an environmental activist to learn how
to combat this very serious problem.
The book can be somewhat misleading
in its use of quotes from celebrity role
models. Although it is important to pro-
vide our children with incentives for
becoming concerned about environ-
mental issues, this book is less a guide
than it is a call-to-action. Coauthors
Laurie David and Cambria Gordon are
environmental activists (and David is
also the producer of An Inconvenient
Truth, among other documentaries).
Parents may well want their children to
become similarly engaged in environ-
mental activism, but this book blurs the
distinction between becoming better
informed and becoming an advocate.
www. biosciencemag. org October 20081 Vol. 58 No. 9 •
BioScience 885
Fall Focus on Books
Medía bias
While most scientists and environmen-
tal activists argue that global warming is
taking place at an accelerating pace, a few
others claim that the warming trend
observed over the past decades is part of
a cycle between cooling and warming
periods. From this perspective, another
issue emerges: media bias. The Sky's Not
Falling! Why It's OK to Chill about Global
Warming (ages 9 to 14) is offered as an
alternative "to the overwhelming num-
ber of liberal kids' books on the market,"
according to the press release from the
publisher. Holly Fretwell, a faculty mem-
ber at Montana State University, cen-
tered her book around the thesis that
media concern with climate change is
exaggerated. Fretwell states that "with-
out greenhouse gases the earth would
be a very cold place to live." This is true
but seems misleading, given that the
concern arises because concentrations
of such gases are rapidly increasing. Her
arguments are not very convincing when
she claims that warmer temperatures
could mean "better food growth per
acre." No references are cited with this
claim. Fretwell also considers biofuels
to be an unrealistic option as energy
alternatives. They may be too costly to
taxpayers since "ethanol is not as efficient
at producing energy as fossil fuels" and
"the costs to society may be greater than
the benefits." Fretwell's "solution" is eco-
nomic growth (perhaps at the expense
of more fossil fuels), and she encourages
us not to fall under the restrictions of the
Kyoto Protocol. Clearly, the child is not
the target audience at this point.
Lessons for learning
Environmental issues will continue to
hold center stage in our scientific, socio-
economic, and political milieu. If we
want our future citizens to make well-
informed decisions about issues related
to the environment, then we need to
ensure that scientifically accurate, non-
biased sources of information are avail-
able to them. Although the issues of
global warming and conservation may
always be subject to interpretation and
political bias, these topics in children's
literature should be presented as objec-
tively as any piece of scientific informa-
tion. Given the vulnerability of young
readers as consumers of information
(scientific and otherwise), children's
books about environmental awareness
should promote a clear understanding
of these issues, thereby offering our
next generation the opportunity not
only to learn about science but also to
apply scientific information to real-life
problems.
JOSÉ VÁZQUEZ
José Vázquez (e-mail: [email protected])
teaches science in the Liberal Studies
Program at New York University.
doi:10.1641/B580918
Include this information when citing this material.
An Updated Guide to Herpetology Terminology
DICTIONARY OF HERPETOLOGY
by Harvey B. Lillywhite
Hardcover, 8 y2 x 11, 384 pages
Orig. Ed. 2008
ISBN 1 -57524-023-8 $112.50
• Complete collection of words that are
central to understanding the biology of
amphibians and reptiles.
• Concise and easy-to-use readable definitions in an
A-to-Z format—11, 358 entries
• Emphasizes terminology related to anatomy, physiology,
systematics, evolution, and other disciplines, including
newly emerged fields that are relevant to the study of
amphibians and reptiles.
• Essential for students, professionals, breeders, or
anyone who îs interested in herpetology and its many
interdisciplinary connections.
To place an order and obtain shipping costs call
1 •800-724-0025
or e-mail us at: [email protected]
KRIEGER PUBLISHING COMPANY
P.O. Box9542 • Melbourne, Florida 32902-9542
> Tel: (321)724-9542 • Fax:(321)951-3671 <
http://www.krieger-publishing.com
886 BioScience • October 2008 / Vol. 58 No. 9 www.
biosciencemag. org
Sheet1Thickness of Selected Sheets of
Paper.Thickness0.003850.003580.003720.004180.003800.00399
0.004240.003750.004490.004220.004070.004340.003810.00421
0.003970.004250.004490.004620.004670.004040.003910.00431
0.003980.00415
Sheet2
Sheet3
A 306 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental
Health Perspectives
Environews Spheres of Influence
Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City
G
reen roofs — rooftops that are partially or
completely covered with vegetation growing
in soil medium over a waterproof mem-
brane—have gained momentum over the past six years as
building owners recognize their advantages over conven-
tional roofing in terms of better energy efficiency and
reduced rain runoff. Now local governments are exploring
incentives for moving the practice into the mainstream.
A look at cities that are leading the country in green roof
coverage reveals a growing range of policy tools.
Millennium Park atop Chicago’s City Hall covers 24.5 acres.
The public park
includes numerous fountains, sculptures, and botanical garden
spaces, as well
as performance facilities, restaurants, and a skating rink.
G
re
en
R
o
o
fs
f
o
r
H
ea
lt
h
y
C
it
ie
s
Capital Growth
Alexi Boado, low-impact development
coordinator for Washington, DC’s District
D e p a r t m e n t o f t h e E n v i r o n m e n t
(DDOE), says the city began seriously
examining green roofs for stormwater con-
trol five years ago, when the DC Water
and Sewer Authority provided $300,000
for green roof development as part of a
court-ordered settlement. Those funds,
managed by the nonprofit Chesapeake Bay
Foundation, seeded a program of incentive
grants that encouraged eight builders to
choose green roofs over other traditional
devices as their primary stormwater con-
trol device (stormwater control plans are
required for any new construction or rede-
velopment of more than 5,000 square feet
in the District). Builders also have a proce-
dural incentive: designs that include a
green roof in the stormwater control plan
receive expedited processing.
To build local engineering design and
green construction capacity and catalyze
interest in green roofs, the DDOE is work-
ing with the USDA Natural Resources
Conservation Service to offer almost
$800,000 in complete design-and-build ser-
vices for select public and commercial prop-
erties. This program is slated to begin in the
summer of 2007. In addition, as part of a
cash grants program, DDOE and its sister
agencies are in the process of installing green
roofs on three new community recreation
centers, two public schools, and one housing
development. Previous grants have subsi-
dized some of the first green roofs in the
District, as well as the implementation of
many other innovative stormwater control
practices such as rain gardens and permeable
surfaces. The District allotted about
$500,000 in 2007 to innovative stormwater
control grants in addition to the Natural
Resources Conservation Service partnership.
Dawn Gifford, program coordinator of
the nonprofit DC Greenworks, has seen a
shift in green roof installations from mainly
commercial buildings to a mix of commer-
cial and residential. DC Greenworks has
dedicated itself to installing green roofs
throughout the city; a high-profile demo
model they installed at 1425 K Street NW in
2004 has drawn more than 3,000 visitors
and inspired similar projects across the met-
ropolitan area.
Doug Siglin, director of federal affairs for
the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, explains
the public policy perspective behind the
interest in green roofs: one problem in the
Anacostia River, which runs through
Washington, DC, and in the bay generally,
is too much erosion, with silt increasing
water turbidity. Most erosion comes from
stormwater runoff; green roofs help moder-
ate that blast of runoff from precipitation
events, and therefore help local governments
A 308 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental
Health Perspectives
Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City
G
re
en
R
o
o
fs
f
o
r
H
ea
lt
h
y
C
it
ie
s
The Ballard Library in Seattle incorporates solar panels into its
green roof design. Energy generated from these panels is fed
back in
to the city’s power grid. The curved roof create six
microclimate conditions, each a separate exposure with
differing water retention
properties, based on slope and orientation.
deal with rainwater by detaining, retaining,
and absorbing it where it first hits.
Chicago officials see another public
health benefit in moderating the city’s “heat
island” effect (defined as urban and suburban
areas having temperatures up to 10°F higher
than nearby rural sites). Heat islands spike
energy demands, air pollution levels, and
heat-related illnesses such as heat exhaustion
and heat stroke. With climate change, says
Sadhu Johnston, the city’s commissioner for
the environment, Chicago can expect hotter
and drier summers—conditions that the heat
island effect will only exacerbate.
Johnston says green roofs can help avert
heat wave–related deaths, citing studies that
show lower temperatures on green roofs
compared with traditional roofs, and reduced
air-conditioning use in buildings with green
roofs. According to the 2004 Green Roof Test
Plot 2003 End of Year Project Summary
Report by environmental engineering firm
MWH, which is posted on the City of
Chicago website, the mean temperature of
green roof areas in the heat of the day
(between 12:30 and 4:30 pm) was up to
31% cooler than other roof types.
Salad Days of Incentives
Chicago mayor Richard Daley, Jr., installed a
green roof on City Hall after returning from a
1999 visit to Europe, where he saw one in
action. “That [installation] really sparked peo-
ple’s imagination,” says Johnston. The city
also offered grants and stormwater credits (a
reduction in city fees for stormwater manage-
ment) to prospective green roof owners to
jumpstart the practice. Today Chicago leads
the country in green roofs, with 300 buildings
comprising some 3 million square feet of
green roofing, says Johnston. Most such roofs
are on commercial buildings (including
Target and McDonald’s) but many are on
civic buildings and smaller stores.
Incentives also evolved in Portland,
Oregon. Tom Liptan, an environmental
specialist with the city Bureau of Environ-
mental Services, says about 20 years ago
the city added a floor area ratio (FAR)
b o n u s t o i t s b u i l d i n g c o d e w h e r e b y
builders could get permission to build
extra square footage (either up or out) by
employing favored practices. In the 1990s
Liptan realized that European-style green
roofs might help Portland with stormwater
control. He put a green roof on his garage
in 1996 and measured rain runoff for two
years. Eventually, the city adjusted its FAR
bonus to include green roofs as a favored
practice. One builder who installed 4,000
square feet of green roof, for example,
received permission to build an extra
12,000 square feet of building density; the
builder was able to add six condo units,
then selling for $395,000 each. “They
spent sixty thousand dollars to get two
Environmental Health Perspectives • VOLUME 115 | NUMBER
6 | June 2007 A 309
Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City
(left) Stormwater flows from the green roof at Sanitation
District No. 1 in Fort Wright, Kentucky, into a naturalized
wetland, then a
retention basin, a detention basin, step pools, and finally into
Banklick Creek. (right) One of Washington, DC’s first green
roofs was
installed at 1425 K Street NW.
Le
ft
t
o
r
ig
h
t:
G
re
en
R
o
o
fs
f
o
r
H
ea
lt
h
y
C
it
ie
s;
D
C
G
re
en
w
o
rk
s
A 310 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental
Health Perspectives
Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City
A
ll
im
ag
es
:
G
re
en
R
o
o
fs
f
o
r
H
ea
lt
h
y
C
it
ie
s
million dollars’ worth of additional sellable
property,” says Liptan.
Chicago likewise gives a density bonus
for green roofs in its central business district,
which permits developers to increase the
number of units allowed on a piece of prop-
erty. The city also offers an “express lane” for
the permit process. Johnston says with a
green roof in the design, “you get a dedicated
team of reviewers, and you get a permit in
thirty days” as compared to the typical 90 to
100 days. Plus, the city waives the develop-
er’s fee for processing the building permit
application.
Inducements include sticks as well as car-
rots. Chicago requires any developer who
receives city assistance (for example, to reha-
bilitate a brownfield) to include a green roof.
Builders have reservations about that
approach, since green roofs have a higher ini-
tial cost. Stuart Match Suna, cofounder of
production company Silvercup Studios,
which installed a green roof on its building
in Long Island City, New York, is leery of
regulatory mandates. “I would be reluctant
to require them,” he told the September
2006 issue Metropolis magazine. “That
would make New York City that much more
expensive [to rent or own property in].”
Mary Margaret Hiller, marketing and com-
munications director for Washington,
DC–based developer Akridge, adds, “There
is a premium to pay for a green roof, so I
think it’s up to the developer whether they
feel a green roof is necessary.”
But builders also note growing client
interest. “If you want to be a player, you
have to be up on these technologies,” says
Hiller. Akridge, for example, has gone from
having no green roof designs several years
ago to managing three green-roofed proper-
ties now and developing designs for three
more, including one property that will be
completed next year.
Tools for the Trade
After years of clarifying green roof prac-
tices and benefits for builders, nonprofit
groups and associations are helping gov-
ernments explore the economics and poli-
cies affecting the technology, sometimes
with industry funding. In New York City,
Earth Pledge, an industry association of
green builders, has worked with city offi-
cials to oversee design and construction of
seven roof projects on condos and apart-
ment buildings in the Bronx, Brooklyn,
and Harlem, according to executive direc-
tor Leslie Hoffman. “There is recognition
that multifamily residential is a very inter-
esting opportunity for green roofs,” she
says, estimating that close to half of Earth
Pledge’s green roof projects are on apart-
ment buildings.
In February 2007, Earth Pledge and the
nonprofit Green Roofs for Healthy Cities
received a $300,000 grant from the Home
Two views of the Louisa, a Portland, Oregon, residential high-
rise with 242 apartments and ground-floor retail. Other green
features of
the building include high-efficiency glazing, low-toxicity
building materials and finishes, and locally sourced
construction materials.
Environmental Health Perspectives • VOLUME 115 | NUMBER
6 | June 2007 A 311
Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City
Depot Foundation to foster green infrastruc-
ture in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Atlanta,
and other cities. “We’re focused on develop-
ing smart tools [for policy makers and
developers],” says Hoffman. These include
models that show planners how much water a
green roof at a given location is likely to cap-
ture, and GIS-based models that show how a
larger-scale shift to green roofs would affect
stormwater outflow at the watershed level.
There is no national inventory of green
roof policies, but in April 2007 Green Roofs
for Healthy Cities launched the Green Roofs
Tree of Knowledge, a database on research
and policy related to green roof infrastruc-
ture. At a regional level, in March 2007 the
Washington, DC–based nonprofit group
RESOLV prepared a report, Public Funding
Incentives for Private Residential and
Commercial Watershed Protection Projects, for
officials in Montgomery County, Maryland.
The report reviewed the region’s rules and
incentives, highlighting case studies nation-
wide, with the aim of improving watershed
health. The report summary stresses targeting
priority sub-watershed areas, voluntary action
by property owners, and public education.
Boado says the EPA is doing a similar study.
Raising the Roof
For everyone, the state of green roof imple-
mentation is in a learning phase. “Most of
the solutions we’ve come up with are home-
grown,” Johnston says of Chicago’s policies.
“Most we haven’t seen used in this country
before.”
The EPA cites green roofs as one option
for ameliorating the heat island effect.
Hoffman suggests that the EPA could incor-
porate green roofs into incentives for cities to
comply with the Clean Water Act. For
example, by developing a green roof plan, a
city might gain a postponement against fed-
eral compliance requirements. Such an
option would likely be seen as an opportuni-
ty rather than a regulatory burden.
This would keep the push for green roofs
at the city level, where rivalries keep advance-
ments bubbling. “Chicago is the leading
competition for us—friendly competition,”
Portland’s Liptan says. Washington’s Boado
confirms this sporting element. “Chicago has
thrown down the gauntlet,” he says. “We’re
the nation’s capital, and we want to be the
greenest city in America.”
Siglin says that relatively small subsidies
can nudge developers. “It’s a good policy les-
son for governments,” he says: with a few
grants and educational outreach, governments
can foster a practice that reduces the public
costs of managing runoff and water pollution
abatement. As a policy tool, then, green roofs
show unexpected potential. “That,” says
Siglin, “helps the taxpayer in many ways.”
David A. Taylor
The green roof on the Phillips Eco-Enterprise Center in
Minneapolis, stocked with native plants, educates visitors about
the dimin-
ishing local bedrock bluff prairie ecosystem. The roof also
offers a pleasing view to passengers on the nearby elevated
train.
green
"Green'' programs and facilities delivered by public
park and recreation agencies are influencing the next
wave of environmentally conscious citizens.
By Judith A. Stock ,
Baltimore's Family Fishing Fun program
introduces kids-and their parents-to the
natural world.
6 4 P A R K S ^ R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0
CARING FOR OUR ENVIRONMENT
GROWING
GREEN KIDS
W
hen Club Chameleon
took its first group of
kids on an overnight
wilderness adventure,
in 2003, the intention
was to impact as many young people
as possible.
Today, the program, offered by the
Newmarket Recreation agency in New
Hampshire, reaches 215 children, ages
10-16, and has received designation by
NRPA as one of 20 pilot agencies for
the 2007 Teens Outside program, spon-
sored in partnership v^th the Outdoor
Foundation.
Once a month, Club Chameleon
runs a different outdoor weekend ex-
perience for 20 teens and 10 staff. What
keeps these kids coming back for more?
The friends they make and the sense
that the club belongs to them—which
it does.
One of the most successfiil things the
organization did, says Anneliese Fisher,
Club Chameleon director, is partner
with the University of New Hampshire
and its students to lead some of the
wilderness adventure trips. The stu-
dents receive college credits, and the
children are richer for the experience.
"As the program has grown, 45 of
the students have become mentors to
the group's kids," says Fisher. "They've
donated bikes and kayaks for the chil-
dren, too. We are very tied to our uni-
versity community."
Funding for the nonprofit Club
Chameleon comes from grants and cor-
porate donations, says Fisher, "so the
parents don't have to pay a dime. That
makes us a level playing field. The town
is low-to-moderate income, and there
are lots of kids who wouldn't have the
opportunity to participate otherwise."
Although the town of Newmarket is
located 20 minutes away from the coast,
three-quarters ofthe children who
attend Club Chameleon have never had
the opportunity to stand at the ocean's
shore. For some of these kids, going
hiking in the White Mountains, 45 min-
utes away, was another first.
"When we stood on top of the
mountain, the look on their faces was
amazement," Fisher says. "They didn't
even know what was in their own back-
yard. Through our program, they are
being given a greater appreciation of
their surroundings."
The perfect opportunity for teaching
stewardship principles to young chil-
dren is immersing them in nature. And
these kids are card-carrying members
of the "Leave No Trace" national pro-
gram that seeks to minimize the indi-
vidual impact on the natural environ-
ment. The kids don't trash the streams
or break branches from the trees, and
they easily police themselves and one
another. The skills they learn can be
used throughout their lives.
Fisher says the kids work hard to-
gether as a team and as they do, their
self-esteem and self-confidence grow.
The club is all about support to help
them get through their teenage years.
"At our community center, the kids
constantly come in to see us," says
Fisher. "Sometimes, I see their report
cards before their parents do."
Club members. Fisher says, feel a
family-like connection and take care
of each other. One day at school, for
instance, a bully confronted a club
member. Immediately, three fellow club
members stepped in to stop the bully-
ing and vralked the accosted member
home.
The club kids call Fisher "Mama
Bear" because they know she will pro-
tect them. A firm believer in the
Richard Louv book Last Child in the
Woods, which argues that children are
becoming increasingly disconnected
from nature, she agrees that children
today don't play outside like kids used
to and, consequently, their imaginations
aren't being challenged.
Paying it forward. Club Chameleon
involves a significant community serv-
ice component. Club kids engage in
projects such as mentoring younger
children or providing community
service at town festivals. They've even
adopted a 175-acre farm in Maine,
where they removed old, rusted farm
equipment and built a chicken coop.
"Our teens don't test us," says Fisher.
"They know what is being given to
them, the expectations involved, and
that if they don't live up to those ex-
pectations, there is no more camping
for them."
Last weekend, on a skiing expedition.
Fisher was told by the women handing
out ski rentals that every one of the 20
kids said, "please" and "thank you"
when receiving his or her equipment.
"These kids," says Fisher "know they are
changing the way people look at teens."
In Baltimore:
Hook, Line, and Sinker
Bob Wall, division chief of youth and
adult sports at the Baltimore City De-
partment of Recreation and Parks, has
P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8
Peter Bergeron, 14, climbs at Pawtuckaway State Park in
Raymond, N.H.,
as part of Club Chameleon and NRPA's Teens Outside program.
run the agency's Family Fishing Fun
program for the past six years.
As an anchor agency in tbe Take Me
Fishing^"^ initiative, a national strategy
of NRPA and the Recreational Boating
and Fishing Foundation (RBFF) aimed
at introducing and growing participa-
tion in boating and fishing, Wall has
been able to increase the reach of the
fishing program and make it available
to Baltimore families on Tuesday
evenings during the months of May,
June, September, and October. Families
meet at the Patterson Park Boat Lake,
where participants are furnished with a
rod, reel, and bait, and spend two hours
fishing in this catch-and-release park
program. Some families bring a picnic
dinner, using the tables scattered
around the lake.
"This program has been really suc-
cessful," says Wall. "We talk to the kids
about how to keep the environment
clean, and we have [them] pick up any
trash lying around."
The summer fishing program targets
kids ages 3 and older. All 46 recreation
centers throughout the city offer the
opportunity to schedule a fisbing trip
at Patterson Park Boat Lake, which is
located on three acres in the heart of
Baltimore.
"During this program, we partner
with the Audubon Society and take two
groups of children from different cen-
ters, 15 kids in each group," explains
Wall. "We take one group, and the
Audubon volunteers take the other.
We take our kids fishing, and the other
group goes bird-watching or does an
environmentally related arts and crafts
program."
Patterson Park, where the lake is
located, is one of the oldest parks in
Baltimore, encompassing 155 acres. It
was designed as a smaller version of
New York's Central Park.
After offering the fishing program for
five years, it became obvious to park
officials that if the program were to go
forward at Patterson Park Boat Lake,
the facility would need some serious
attention, perhaps even a facelift. Sixty
percent of the lake had become choked
off with cattails and lily pads, and sedi-
ment badly needed to be removed from
the bottom. To keep young children
from falling into deep water, the shore-
line had to be altered to meet safety
requirements.
"Last year we had about 3,500 kids
come through tbe program, ages 3 to
teens," says Wall. Much of the increase
can be attributed to Baltimore's anchor
agency status with NRPA and RBFF,
through which it received grant funding
to expand community fishing pro-
grams.
The principles of a successful, engag-
ing stewardship program for children
include organization, community
involvement, and partnerships.
As is the case with many programs.
Wall cautions against trying to go it
alone. Instead, he says, consider devel-
oping support groups. For the Balti-
more fishing program, having the 800-
member Friends of Patterson Park as an
ally is a tremendous bonus.
Program leaders have found another
friend in Tochterman's Tackle Shop, a
small, 95-year-old, family-owned fish-
ing tackle shop near the park that's
been quite generous across the years.
"We have never paid for any bait, and
that is a whole lot of worms and night
crawlers," says Wall.
"Our town has an initiative to make
Baltimore greener," says Wall. "We are
planting an enormous amount of trees
to regain our canopy. Aesthetically, if
the eye sees trees and not just buildings,
it will be a more pleasing sight. And,
66 P A R K S E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8
since the park is only two miles from
the city center and the famed harbor
area of Baltimore, the city's enhance-
ment would benefit the park."
In the end, the most important fea-
ture of the fishing program is that the
kids who attend "will teach their chil-
dren to be greener and more environ-
mentally friendly," says Wall. "The
greener the kids, the better off everyone
will be. There will be a lot more job
opportunities for people who under-
stand the environment"
Wall gauges the fishing program's
success by the number of smiles he
sees—and by the number of kids who
come back. "We always keep 40 fishing
rods on hand, but I know a kid is really
interested when he brings his own fish-
ing rod," says Wall. "Get them hooked
on fishing and that will keep them away
from all the bad influences."
Growing Lifelong Stewards
"It's our mission to instill a sense of
stewardship in our community so that
throughout the children's lifetime, they
can make good environmental deci-
sions," says Katie Shaw, nature center
manager for Walker Nature Education
Center in Reston, Va. "Those are the
things I hope they take away with them.
That, and a great desire to learn about
nature."
The center's director for 17 years,
Shaw says kids find out quickly from
their programs that nature puts every-
one involved on equal footing. "You
don't have to be the smartest or the
fastest," she says. "You can just be you."
Shaw likes the fact that the nature
center introduces children to the envi-
ronment at an early age, when they are
most impressionable, explaining, "We
start our lS-month-olds out in our
Babies in the Woods program," where
participants are exposed to sensory
experiences in a series of one-hour pro-
grams that let them hear, see, touch,
and smell their surroundings. "We have
learning stations and, as often as possi-
ble, in good weather, we take them out
on the trail," says Shaw.
The core programs include Nature
With a sense of stewardship in the community, children will
make a lifetime's worth
of good environmental decisions.
Tots, geared toward 3- to 5-year-olds
who can come to the nature center's
camp during the summer, and field
trips for elementary school children in
the spring and fall. "With our teens, we
do the work-learn experience, and, as
they move toward adulthood, we offer
summer jobs for teens and internships
Children's Play Structures
WE SHIP & INSTALL WORLDWIDE
We design, manufacture and install play structures foM
community centers, parks, schools and day cares.
We adhere to ASTM, CPRA, IPEMA safety guidelines.
International Play Company
Tel: 604-882-1188 Fax: 604-882-1977 Email: [email protected]
www.iplayco.com t
C I R C L E 4 5 O N P R O D U C T I N f O R M A T I O N C A
R D O R V I S I T W W W . N R P A . O R G / F R E E I N F 0
High Performance.
No Maintenance.
Enhance any environment with Venus'
Planters and Trash Receptacles, So durable
they're guaranteed for 20 years.
Valley Vj www.valleyviewind.com
ph 800-323-9369
C I R C L E 4 4 ON P R O D U C T I N F O R M A T I O N C A
R D OR V I S I T WWW-NftPA.OftG/FREEINFO
P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8
A camper explores aquatic life in a Reston, Va., stream.
with college students," she says.
All ofthe center's programs take
place trailside within the facility's 72-
acre site, and are built around a four-
stage model that includes awareness,
appreciation, knowledge, and action.
Shaw advises taking advantage ofthe
teachable moments by presenting pro-
grams that supplement the auditory,
visual, and tactile experience. "This is
the key" she suggests. "When you get
auditory, visual, and tactile in one pro-
gram, this is when you know your
important message will be retained."
In measuring a program's success,
Shaw uses two methods, one formal
and the other informal. She first sug-
gests getting written evaluations from
staff, teachers, and parents. To illustrate
the informal method, Shaw relates a
coincidental meeting with a parent in
the grocery store: "The parent told me
their kid went into biology in college
because ofthe camp program."
With a strong stewardship program,
says Shaw, "you make the right envi-
ronmental choices. You hear all the
time that everyone makes a difference,
but when it comes to the environment,
it really is true. It's about the legacy we
leave behind."
NRPA: Where the Kids Are Outdoors
SaJd
Sajai Wise Kids *̂̂̂̂ Outdoors
It's a fact: Children today are spending
less time outdoors engaged In sponta-
neous play, NRPA and the Sajai"^" Founda-
tion are partnering to reconnect kids with
the natural environment. This exciting new
program will have them exploring nature
outside their door while it teaches them
about the importance of eating right and
being physically active. Each session
engages kids in outdoor adventure mis-
sions guided by trained recreation staff,
and is sure to get them excited about
their natural surroundings.
For more information, visit
www.nrpa.org/wisekids.
OUTDOOR
INDUSTRY
F O U N D A T I O N
Teens Outside
Teens Outside is a program that introduces
youth ages 11 -17 to outdoor recreation
through sustained, season-long experi-
ences in hiking, camping, climbing, biking,
paddling, and other activities with the
goal of fostering a new generation of out-
door enthusiasts. Through an NRPA part-
nership with the Outdoor Foundation, the
program was piloted in 2007 with 20 park
and recreation agencies across the coun-
try. By the end of the year, the Teens Out-
side program had succeeded in involving
more than 3,560 teens and 250 mentors
in outdoor experiences. NRPA and the
Outdoor Foundation are working to fine-
tune and expand the program to include
additional agencies, and intend to incorpo-
rate a community and environmental
stewardship pillar.
For more information, visit
www.nrpa.org/teensoutside.
Take Me Fishing^"
NRPA and the Recreational Boating and
Fishing Foundation (RBFF) are partnering
to get kids outdoors through boating and
fishing. The Take Me Fishing^"^ initiative
aims to give hectic families an opportunity
to reconnect in an outdoor setting, teach
youth new life skills, and incorporate fish-
ing and boating as part of a healthy life-
style. In its two years, this initiative has
reached more than 300 park and recre-
ation agencies, engaging some 90,000
youth ages 6-11. NRPA and RBFF have
a strong commitment to initiatives that
focus on youth and the outdoors, foster
future anglers, and provide education
on environmental conservation. The 2008
program is set to launch in the coming
months.
Look for more information at
www.nrpa.org/fishing.
68 P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8
Running head: TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 1
Technology Is Transferring Human Education to Computers
Student Name
Columbia Southern University
TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 2
Technology Is Transferring Human Education to Computers
Technology is used every day. As time passes and technology
becomes increasingly more
advanced, humans also become increasingly more dependent on
that technology. This can be a
good thing because technology has the potential to make life
considerably easier, but this can
also cause a deficiency in the human race, beginning at a basic
level: children. One of the major
benefits of technology has been education in an online setting.
However, this is also one of the
possibilities of deficiency in public interaction with other
humans, stemming from elementary
schools. The foundation of this paper will examine both, while
elaborating on the psychological
aspect of childhood de-socialization upon integrating them fully
into the online setting, thereby
negating their human interactive development by natural
socialization processes. I hope that my
research will go on to delay and even inhibit altogether the
addition of primary schools to a
solely online setting. As an advocate for higher education in
this setting, this paper will also
campaign against lawmakers who would seek to implement this
style of learning into the primary
school levels due to the damage that it could inflict on the
young.
This topic originated from personal experience in online
learning and the benefits of such
a flexible learning style for the active life of an average adult
with a profession, a family, and
various other daily demands on their time. The opposition being
that of a teenager straight out of
high school, attending a traditional brick and mortar type
college/university, without the cares of
an adult life yet. My passion comes from my direct experience
in both a traditional college and
the online college experience. Additionally, I have a unique
viewpoint as that of a previously
younger student from my primary/middle school days. I was
able to see the differences in the
public school system and the private school system and can
therefore correlate this difference to
being equal to that of the differences in online and traditional
colleges. This gives me a stronger
TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 3
opinion of instilling socialization skills in children at an early
age. Finally, my college study of
psychology, which is defined as “the scientific study of
behavior and mental processes” (Matlin,
1999, p. 4) has illuminated the necessity of socialization as
children, and the possibilities for
abnormal personality disorders that can manifest from the lack
of early childhood socialization
(Nevid, Rathus, & Greene, 2008).
The tentative argument of this topic is based on the progression
of schools that have
already conformed to the online setting. Gwinnett County,
Georgia has already implemented
fully online high schools, and there is information regarding the
full implementation of
elementary schools as well. The information that I intend to
argue with this paper will illuminate
the negative effects of this action, by demonstrating the
psychological aspects of our basic
human need for socialization (Macionis, 2009).
The world’s growing reliance on technology is transitioning
human education to
becoming fully online, for all age and education levels, thereby
removing the socialization
necessary for human public interaction. This statement will be
the basis of my research of this
topic. With the discussion of socialization, I intend to
demonstrate that we as humans “need
social experience to learn [our] culture and to survive”
(Macionis, 2009, p. 72).
TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 4
Reference
Macionis, J. (2009). Society the basics (10th ed.). Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson Prentice
Hall.
Matlin, M. E., (1999). Psychology (3rd ed.). Orlando, FL:
Harcourt Brace College.
Nevid, J. S., Rathus, S. A., & Greene, B. (2009). Abnormal
psychology in a changing world
(Custom ed.). New York, NY: Pearson Prentice Hall.
Purpose:
The purpose of the Research Proposal is to mold the preliminary
ideas you have about your topic and to develop them in an
academic manner. This development occurs as a direct result of
your research on the subject. Therefore, this is your first formal
articulation of your project. The Research Proposal is the next
step towards writing assignments that will help you construct
your Research Paper.
Description:
In this 500-600-word, essay-style Research Proposal, you will
develop the project that you intend to write about for your final
Research Paper for this course. If your Research Proposal is less
than this word count, then it is likely you have not fully
developed your proposal or adhered to the assignment
appropriately, which can severely impact your grade for this
assignment. Your Research Proposal will include the elements
listed below.
Your Research Proposal should also include a list of references
in APA style and should adhere to APA convention throughout
for in-text citation and style. When you write for academic or
public audiences, it is imperative that you are supported by
voices other than your own. In other words, even if you are an
expert, you still must support your assertions.
In a Research Proposal, the same is true. For this assignment,
you will include at least one source in your description of your
tentative argument. The source cannot be yourself, an interview,
or your text book. You must research your topic in order to gain
a valid academic source that speaks to your topic in some way.
Elements:
Your Research Proposal grade will be largely based on your
inclusion of the elements listed below, as well as your
development of the project. For assistance, you might want to
refer to Chapter 1, Section 1a, of The Little, Brown Compact
Handbook with Exercises (pp. 3-4). Your Research Proposal
must contain the following elements:
1. Cover page and APA formatting:
You will include an APA-style cover page for your Research
Proposal. See the example on page 16 of The CSU APA Guide
(6th edition). Your cover page should include the following: the
title of your future Research Paper (this may be changed as your
project develops), your name, and the name of your university
(Columbia Southern University). The cover page must also
include a running head which should include up to 50 characters
from the title of the paper, along with a sequential page number
in the upper right-hand corner. You can find instructions for
formatting the running head on pp. 9-11 of The CSU APA
Guide.
2. Purpose:
Review the purpose statement on p. 333 of Strategies for
Writing Successful Research Papers. You may also want to refer
to Chapter 1, Section 1c of The Little, Brown Compact
Handbook with Exercises (pp. 6-7). The following questions
should be addressed in the first paragraph of your Research
Proposal, which should be dedicated to establishing your
purpose for doing this particular project.
• What is your rationale for this project?
• What do you hope to learn from the project, or what to do you
want to see happen as a result of it?
• Who is your audience for this project? Chapter 1, Section 1d,
of The Little, Brown Compact Handbook with Exercises (pp. 7-
8)
• What role will you play in this project: investigator or
advocate?
3. Statement of qualification:
Address the following questions as they are applicable to your
project.
• What is your investment in the topic?
• What personal experience do you bring to the topic?
• What special qualities do you bring to the project?
• How might your investment, experience, and special qualities
make you particularly apt at developing this project?
4. Tentative argument:
Your final Research Paper for this course will be an
argumentative, research-based, academic paper. While it is
unlikely that you will have a concrete idea of what your entire
argument will be at this point in the writing process, it is
necessary for you to articulate your argument as you understand
it to be right now. Address the following questions.
• What is the context surrounding your topic? In other words, is
there some event that was a catalyst for bringing your topic into
the public eye? (Optional)
• What is your explanation or definition of the topic?
• What is your analysis of the specific issue surrounding your
topic?
• What is your tentative thesis statement or hypothesis?
5. References:
Include a references list as the last page of your Research
Proposal. See the example on pages 6, 7, and 21 of The CSU
APA Guide (6th edition). All entries are those that have been
cited in the text. No others are to be included. No textbooks
should be included on the r
Topics Inventory
1. Academic studies
Personal interest: The French Language
Academic subject: The French Language, Culture,
History and Politics
Possible topics: "Teaching the English Language in
France"
"Expat living in France"
"International Business"
2. Social issue
Personal interest: Green Living
Social issue: The Government Implementing Green
Living into our EverydayLives.
Possible topics: "Teaching Grade School Kids the
Importance of Green Living"
"Planting Organic Gardens within Urban
City Vacant fields, Lots and Rooftops.
"Implement a Law Making Recycling
Mandatory Nationwide"
3. Scientific subject
Personal interest: Conserving Energy
Scientific subject: Finding other Alternatives to using
Oil for Energy
Possible topics: "Burning Fuel Low in Toxins"
"The Use of Recycle Products to be used as
Fossil
Fuel"
"Learn ways of Using Electric Energy to
help with the Worlds Pollution Problem.
4. Cultural background
Personal interest: Multi-racial and Cultured
Cultural background: Multi-racial to be Recognized
Worldwide
Possible topics: "How America became a Melting Pot"
"How being multi-racial have impacted the
Census Bureau.
"The History of New Orleans, its Culture
and People"
Controlling Idea Statement
Enthymeme: The introduction of “Green Living” into the
American school system is very critical in teaching the
importance of recycling; green living and keeping the
environment clean to our youths. Earth Day is a prime example
of encouraging individuals, including adolescences the
importance of saving the future of our planet Earth, ourselves
and the generation to follow. Again, it is very important that
our schools introduce to our children green living, re-cycling,
organic gardening and how to become better at being aware of
their surrounding and planet. This is the beginning of turning
the entire world green, one child at a time.
Short Proposal
American schools are cultivating to the green living lifestyle.
Environmental education is becoming more evident in educating
today’s school-age children. National Green week introduced
the term “Green Living” to students and the importance of how
an eco-lifestyle is beneficial to preserving our planet and
ourselves.
The purpose of my paper is to help enlighten the parents, school
system and the public about the importance of teaching children
an eco-lifestyle at a very young age. Educating individuals at a
very young age can be extremely difficult and trying. This is
because tradition is being broken due to the fact, we live within
a society where everything is instant, disposable and easy
accessible. This can make it very difficult to train a child in the
importance of saving our planet. Children of today is used to
everything happening at a very fast pace. We have to teach
them a lot of our everyday items we use or consume daily can
actually harm or be detrimental to our environment and their
health. In my paper, I will speak as an advocate for the “Green
Living” lifestyle. I will write about the consequences of what
to expect if we continue to live as human beings the same way
we have been living for the last decades and third what we can
do to combat this problem starting with teaching the eco-
friendly way of living to our grade-school kids.
The campaign for the education of green living for our youths
should start from at home. Organizers encourage adults to lead
by example. It is very imperative for families to teach their
children to practice green living, and become an advocacy for
environmental awareness at home.

More Related Content

Similar to Fall Focus on BooksGROWING UP GREENA Clean Sky The Gl.docx

Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docx
Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docxBoothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docx
Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docxAASTHA76
 
Towards Re-Earthism
Towards Re-EarthismTowards Re-Earthism
Towards Re-EarthismIan Hafezi
 
Essay On Planet Earth.pdf
Essay On Planet Earth.pdfEssay On Planet Earth.pdf
Essay On Planet Earth.pdfDana French
 
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docx
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docxSurname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docx
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docxmabelf3
 
GrowthD o n e l l a M e a d o w s • J o r g e n R a n d e.docx
GrowthD o n e l l a  M e a d o w s  • J o r g e n  R a n d e.docxGrowthD o n e l l a  M e a d o w s  • J o r g e n  R a n d e.docx
GrowthD o n e l l a M e a d o w s • J o r g e n R a n d e.docxwhittemorelucilla
 
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon Area
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon AreaThe Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon Area
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon AreaTara Hardin
 
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docx
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docxArticle Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docx
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docxfredharris32
 
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docx
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docxX 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docx
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docxodiliagilby
 
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdf
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdfClimate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdf
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdfCourtney Hurst
 
Megan Jorgensen Final Draft
Megan Jorgensen Final DraftMegan Jorgensen Final Draft
Megan Jorgensen Final DraftMegan Jorgensen
 
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERT
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERTGeography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERT
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERTSaurabh Singh Negi
 
The Field Of Ecology And Diversity
The Field Of Ecology And DiversityThe Field Of Ecology And Diversity
The Field Of Ecology And DiversityKimberly Williams
 
Biodiversity presentation 2011
Biodiversity presentation 2011Biodiversity presentation 2011
Biodiversity presentation 2011forumsustentar
 

Similar to Fall Focus on BooksGROWING UP GREENA Clean Sky The Gl.docx (17)

Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docx
Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docxBoothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docx
Boothe Prize Essays 2012-201330spring 2012 HOnOrABLE M.docx
 
Global Essay Topics
Global Essay TopicsGlobal Essay Topics
Global Essay Topics
 
Towards Re-Earthism
Towards Re-EarthismTowards Re-Earthism
Towards Re-Earthism
 
Essay On Planet Earth.pdf
Essay On Planet Earth.pdfEssay On Planet Earth.pdf
Essay On Planet Earth.pdf
 
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docx
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docxSurname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docx
Surname1Student Professor  Cortney BashamCourse IDST .docx
 
GrowthD o n e l l a M e a d o w s • J o r g e n R a n d e.docx
GrowthD o n e l l a  M e a d o w s  • J o r g e n  R a n d e.docxGrowthD o n e l l a  M e a d o w s  • J o r g e n  R a n d e.docx
GrowthD o n e l l a M e a d o w s • J o r g e n R a n d e.docx
 
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon Area
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon AreaThe Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon Area
The Pueblo Of Santa Clara Canyon Area
 
Essay For Environment
Essay For EnvironmentEssay For Environment
Essay For Environment
 
chapter 1
chapter 1chapter 1
chapter 1
 
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docx
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docxArticle Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docx
Article Review #2The author states that history can be explain.docx
 
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docx
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docxX 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docx
X 1Student XAnnotated BibliographyENG 10211 April 2016.docx
 
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdf
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdfClimate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdf
Climate Change And Global Warming Essay.pdf
 
Megan Jorgensen Final Draft
Megan Jorgensen Final DraftMegan Jorgensen Final Draft
Megan Jorgensen Final Draft
 
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERT
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERTGeography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERT
Geography Fundamentals" Class - 12" NCERT
 
The Field Of Ecology And Diversity
The Field Of Ecology And DiversityThe Field Of Ecology And Diversity
The Field Of Ecology And Diversity
 
Climate Communication and Digital Media in the West
Climate Communication and Digital Media in the WestClimate Communication and Digital Media in the West
Climate Communication and Digital Media in the West
 
Biodiversity presentation 2011
Biodiversity presentation 2011Biodiversity presentation 2011
Biodiversity presentation 2011
 

More from mydrynan

CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docxCSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docxmydrynan
 
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docx
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docxCSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docx
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docxmydrynan
 
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points) .docx
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points)   .docxCSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points)   .docx
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points) .docxmydrynan
 
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docxCSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docxmydrynan
 
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docx
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docxCSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docx
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docxmydrynan
 
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018 Ho.docx
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018  Ho.docxCSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018  Ho.docx
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018 Ho.docxmydrynan
 
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docx
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docxCSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docx
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docx
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docxCSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docx
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docx
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docxCSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docx
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docx
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docxCSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docx
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docxmydrynan
 
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docx
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docxCryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docx
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docx
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docxCSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docx
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docxmydrynan
 
CSCE 1040 Homework 2 For this assignment we are going to .docx
CSCE 1040 Homework 2  For this assignment we are going to .docxCSCE 1040 Homework 2  For this assignment we are going to .docx
CSCE 1040 Homework 2 For this assignment we are going to .docxmydrynan
 
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docx
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docxCSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docx
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docx
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docxCSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docx
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docxmydrynan
 
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019 1 of .docx
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019   1 of .docxCSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019   1 of .docx
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019 1 of .docxmydrynan
 
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docx
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docxCSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docx
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docxmydrynan
 
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment In this assignment, you .docx
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment  In this assignment, you .docxCSC-321 Final Writing Assignment  In this assignment, you .docx
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment In this assignment, you .docxmydrynan
 
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docx
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docxCryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docx
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docxmydrynan
 
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docx
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docxCSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docx
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docxmydrynan
 

More from mydrynan (20)

CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docxCSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and Programs.docx
 
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docx
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docxCSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docx
CSIS 100CSIS 100 - Discussion Board Topic #1One of the object.docx
 
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points) .docx
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points)   .docxCSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points)   .docx
CSI Paper Grading Rubric- (worth a possible 100 points) .docx
 
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docxCSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docx
CSIA 413 Cybersecurity Policy, Plans, and ProgramsProject #4 IT .docx
 
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docx
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docxCSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docx
CSI 170 Week 3 AssingmentAssignment 1 Cyber Computer CrimeAss.docx
 
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018 Ho.docx
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018  Ho.docxCSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018  Ho.docx
CSE422 Section 002 – Computer Networking Fall 2018 Ho.docx
 
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docx
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docxCSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docx
CSCI  132  Practical  Unix  and  Programming   .docx
 
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docx
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docxCSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docx
CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and EstimationLec.docx
 
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docx
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docxCSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docx
CSCI 561Research Paper Topic Proposal and Outline Instructions.docx
 
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docx
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docxCSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docx
CSCI 561 DB Standardized Rubric50 PointsCriteriaLevels of .docx
 
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docx
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docxCryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docx
CryptographyLesson 10© Copyright 2012-2013 (ISC)², Inc. Al.docx
 
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docx
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docxCSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docx
CSCI 352 - Digital Forensics Assignment #1 Spring 2020 .docx
 
CSCE 1040 Homework 2 For this assignment we are going to .docx
CSCE 1040 Homework 2  For this assignment we are going to .docxCSCE 1040 Homework 2  For this assignment we are going to .docx
CSCE 1040 Homework 2 For this assignment we are going to .docx
 
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docx
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docxCSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docx
CSCE509–Spring2019Assignment3updated01May19DU.docx
 
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docx
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docxCSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docx
CSCI 2033 Elementary Computational Linear Algebra(Spring 20.docx
 
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019 1 of .docx
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019   1 of .docxCSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019   1 of .docx
CSCE 3110 Data Structures & Algorithms Summer 2019 1 of .docx
 
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docx
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docxCSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docx
CSCI 340 Final Group ProjectNatalie Warden, Arturo Gonzalez, R.docx
 
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment In this assignment, you .docx
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment  In this assignment, you .docxCSC-321 Final Writing Assignment  In this assignment, you .docx
CSC-321 Final Writing Assignment In this assignment, you .docx
 
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docx
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docxCryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docx
Cryptography is the application of algorithms to ensure the confiden.docx
 
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docx
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docxCSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docx
CSc3320 Assignment 6 Due on 24th April, 2013 Socket programming .docx
 

Recently uploaded

Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptx
Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptxRomantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptx
Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptxsqpmdrvczh
 
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomnelietumpap1
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
 
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayQuarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayMakMakNepo
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Educationpboyjonauth
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxiammrhaywood
 
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxTypes of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxEyham Joco
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTiammrhaywood
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxRaymartEstabillo3
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentInMediaRes1
 
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxGrade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxChelloAnnAsuncion2
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon AUnboundStockton
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatYousafMalik24
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Jisc
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptx
Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptxRomantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptx
Romantic Opera MUSIC FOR GRADE NINE pptx
 
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
 
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up FridayQuarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
Quarter 4 Peace-education.pptx Catch Up Friday
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
 
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptxTypes of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
Types of Journalistic Writing Grade 8.pptx
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
 
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxGrade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
 
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdfTataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
 

Fall Focus on BooksGROWING UP GREENA Clean Sky The Gl.docx

  • 1. Fall Focus on Books GROWING UP GREEN A Clean Sky: The Global Warming Story. Robyn C. Friend and Judith Love Cohen. Cascade Pass, Marina del Rey, CA, 2007. 48 pp., illus. $13.95 (ISBN 9781880599822 cloth). The Down-to-Earth Guide to Global Warming. Laurie David and Cambria Gordon. Scholastic, New York, 2007. 128 pp., illus. $15.99 (ISBN 9780439024945 paper). The Forever Forest: Kids Save a Tropical Treasure. Kristin Joy Pratt-Serafini and Rachel Crandell. Dawn Publications, Nevada City, CA, 2008. 32 pp., illus. $16.95 (ISBN 9781584691013 doth). How We Know What We Know about Our Changing Climate: Scientists and Kids Explore Global Warming. Lynne Cherry and Gary Braasch. Dawn Publications, Nevada City, CA, 2008.66 pp., illus. $17.95 (ISBN 9781584691037 cloth). One Well: The Story of Water on Earth. Rochelle Strauss. Kids Can Press, Tonawanda, NY, 2007. 32 pp., illus. $17.95 (ISBN 9781553379546 cloth). The Sky's Not Falling! Why It's OK to Chill about Global Warming. Holly Fretyvell. World Ahead Publishing, Los Angeles, 2007. 128 pp., illus. $10.99 (ISBN 9780976726944 paper). Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean
  • 2. Motion. Loree Griffin Burns. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 2007. 64 pp., illus. $18.00 (ISBN 9780618581313 cloth). E nvironmental conservation andglobal warming are two of the hottest topics in science today, and among the hottest resources for chil- dren are the following new titles, which target various age groups but have a common goal of developing environmental consciousness in our kids. These books range from providing a basic understanding of environmental issues to showcasing a specific aspect of our environment that needs focused consideration. The books are meant to. stir awareness by using the full gamut of motivational techniques, from soft cliché to hard statistic. Their goal is to fuel motivation, some by suggesting tried and true conservation practices, and others by leaning more heavily on scientific evidence and the evaluation of it. And with one exception, they serve as seeds for planting the idea of growing up "green." Water conservation The idea of water as a valuable resource and the related issues of water access, pollution, and depletion are thought- fully discussed in One Well: The Story of Water on Earth (ages 9 to 14). Author Rochelle Strauss, an environmental education consultant based in Toronto, focuses the reader on the importance of water conservation by using the anal-
  • 3. ogy of one global well. Renowned artist If we want our future citizens to make well- informed decisions about issues related to the environment, then we need to ensure that . scientifically accurate, nonbiased sources of information are available to them. Rosemary Woods illustrates in rich detail the concept of water as the strand of life that connects everything on Earth. The book is filled with facts and per- centages, but the statistics are paired with easy-to-understand descriptions of tangible objects that readers can wrap their heads around. Toward the end of the book are notes to parents and teach- ers; this is a well-written section that provides helpful ideas, not strident ultimatums, for water conservation. Once children learn about the multiple roles of water in sustaining life, they will be more inclined to view this resource as worthy of protection. Furthermore, once they are imbued with a global sense of community, they may be more inclined to view themselves as having their own responsible roles. Ocean pollution The ultimate reservoir of Earth's water is the ocean, and ocean pollution is the
  • 4. cornerstone of Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion (ages 10 to 14). The collaborative efforts of three scientists to "track trash" through their understanding of wave dynamics, ecological interactions, and biodégradation make the book part data analysis and part detective story. Readers gain insight into climate pat- terns and the variability, of ocean cur- rents, which can lead to better pollution prevention techniques and easier cleanup efforts. First-time author Loree Griffin Burns also discusses an important aspect of ocean pollution: plastics. Her description of the ubiquitous contamination of ocean water with plastic materials, and the resulting threat to marine life, con- stitutes a valuable lesson in responsible management of trash. Through the use of scientific supporting evidence, the book further illustrates how damaging the use of plastics can be to the environ- ment. Burns traces the effects of pol- luted ocean waters and shows how these ultimately lead to changes in our cli- mate and to serious consequences for marine biodiversity. The glossary is helpful since several technical terms are used, and a list of other books and Web resources is also included at the end of the book.
  • 5. 884 BioScience • October 2008 / Vol. 58 No. 9 www. biosciencemag.org Fall Focus on Books Rainforests and species protection The concept of conservation is often demonstrated through efforts that begin locally, but children may also be inspired to participate in conservation efforts by reading about an exotic place in Costa Rica called the Children's Eternal Rain- forest. This 54,000-acre reserve is the backdrop to the story of The Forever Forest: Kids Save a Tropical Treasure (ages 5 to 11). Well known children's author Kristin Joy Pratt-Serafini collaborated with author and rainforest conserva- tionist Rachel Crandell to highlight the significance of the rainforest ecosystem and to send an effective message that the determined actions of children all over the world can be relevant to even large-scale preservation projects. The story is well crafted, full of information, and beautifully enhanced by illustra- tions. Readers learn that the rainforest provides the habitat for numerous species that face extinction as their food webs are disrupted and forest area is reduced by logging and other intrusive human activities. Species protection through reforestation is paramount, and by explaining the importance of these
  • 6. unique tropical forest dwellers in their habitat, the authors are promoting environmental awareness at a young age, which Pratt-Serafini states is "the key to preserving our world." Large-scale conservation efforts, such as protecting an ecosystem as wide as the ocean or as complex as the rainforest, are under way throughout the world. Edu- cational outreach programs for children are excellent ways to emphasize the important work that volunteers do and to develop children's commitment to protect natural habitats. Global warming Growing environmental concern has recently spiked as a result of our grad- ual understanding and acknowledgment of global warming. The term itself has become part of the lexicon in both scientific and political arenas. Major socioeconomic decisions affecting not just the United States but the world have already been made, and will increas- ingly be made, on the basis of judg- ments about global warming. The topic is rife with controversy. Nonetheless, an introduction to global warming for chil- dren can take a direct and scientific approach. A Clean Sky: The Clobal Warming Story (ages 9 to 12) does just that. It is an appealing 48-page primer on global warming that young readers
  • 7. will enjoy. The book provides an objec- tive understanding of a complex issue without adopting political overtones. Robyn C. Eriend and Judith Love Cohen Although the issues of global warming and conservation may always be subject to interpretation and political bias, these topic's in children's literature should be presented as objectively as any piece of scientific information. I (an aerospace engineer) are accom- plished writers of children's books on a variety of empowering subjects. Their approach to global warming is to discuss it from a can-do perspective: first ex- plain the nature of the problem— how does global warming take place over time?—and then offer some possible solutions to fix it. Eor example, the term "greenhouse gases" is adequately defined along with the need to curb emissions, then terminology such as "carbon capture" and "geological stor- age" is introduced as alternative meth- ods for reducing greenhouse gases. The result is a book that is both rational and engaging—optimism served objectively. Documented evidence
  • 8. of climate change Another approach to understanding global warming is to learn about the work being done by an international selection of scientists. Evidence-based knowledge of global climate change is the focus of the book How We Know What We Know about Our Changing Climate: Scientists and Kids Explore Clobal Warming (ages 10 to 14). Studies by more than 40 biologists, as well as student researchers, are documented in this collection of evidence that climate change is real, and that plants and animals are reacting to it. Through clear descriptions of actual scientific studies, a young reader absorbs clues that are symptoms of global warming— rainforest deforestation, rising sea levels, and changing carbon dioxide levels, to name a few. Lynne Cherry, an accom- plished writer of environmental books, and photojournalist Gary Braasch teamed up to write this book, which not only presents a convincing argument, although its advocacy is subtle, but also illustrates the collaborative spirit of scientific research that is required to further our understanding of the long- ranging effects of global warming. Science, after all, is about asking questions, exploring problems, and searching for adequate answers that cannot always be found in a classroom
  • 9. or textbook. This book encourages scientific curiosity and takes a multi- disciplinary approach to learning about our environment. Additional resources are plentiful. Instead of waving the banner of environmental consciousness. How We Know demonstrates ways to take active roles in the community to solve a problem that affects all of us. Activism In comparison. The Down-to-Earth Cuide to Clobal Warming (ages 9 to 12) highlights the importance of environ- mental awareness and describes ways for young readers to become engaged in conservation efforts. The premise is that peer-reviewed studies have already identified solutions to global warming; therefore, the task at hand is to become an environmental activist to learn how to combat this very serious problem. The book can be somewhat misleading in its use of quotes from celebrity role models. Although it is important to pro- vide our children with incentives for becoming concerned about environ- mental issues, this book is less a guide than it is a call-to-action. Coauthors Laurie David and Cambria Gordon are environmental activists (and David is also the producer of An Inconvenient Truth, among other documentaries). Parents may well want their children to become similarly engaged in environ- mental activism, but this book blurs the
  • 10. distinction between becoming better informed and becoming an advocate. www. biosciencemag. org October 20081 Vol. 58 No. 9 • BioScience 885 Fall Focus on Books Medía bias While most scientists and environmen- tal activists argue that global warming is taking place at an accelerating pace, a few others claim that the warming trend observed over the past decades is part of a cycle between cooling and warming periods. From this perspective, another issue emerges: media bias. The Sky's Not Falling! Why It's OK to Chill about Global Warming (ages 9 to 14) is offered as an alternative "to the overwhelming num- ber of liberal kids' books on the market," according to the press release from the publisher. Holly Fretwell, a faculty mem- ber at Montana State University, cen- tered her book around the thesis that media concern with climate change is exaggerated. Fretwell states that "with- out greenhouse gases the earth would be a very cold place to live." This is true but seems misleading, given that the concern arises because concentrations of such gases are rapidly increasing. Her arguments are not very convincing when
  • 11. she claims that warmer temperatures could mean "better food growth per acre." No references are cited with this claim. Fretwell also considers biofuels to be an unrealistic option as energy alternatives. They may be too costly to taxpayers since "ethanol is not as efficient at producing energy as fossil fuels" and "the costs to society may be greater than the benefits." Fretwell's "solution" is eco- nomic growth (perhaps at the expense of more fossil fuels), and she encourages us not to fall under the restrictions of the Kyoto Protocol. Clearly, the child is not the target audience at this point. Lessons for learning Environmental issues will continue to hold center stage in our scientific, socio- economic, and political milieu. If we want our future citizens to make well- informed decisions about issues related to the environment, then we need to ensure that scientifically accurate, non- biased sources of information are avail- able to them. Although the issues of global warming and conservation may always be subject to interpretation and political bias, these topics in children's literature should be presented as objec- tively as any piece of scientific informa- tion. Given the vulnerability of young readers as consumers of information (scientific and otherwise), children's books about environmental awareness
  • 12. should promote a clear understanding of these issues, thereby offering our next generation the opportunity not only to learn about science but also to apply scientific information to real-life problems. JOSÉ VÁZQUEZ José Vázquez (e-mail: [email protected]) teaches science in the Liberal Studies Program at New York University. doi:10.1641/B580918 Include this information when citing this material. An Updated Guide to Herpetology Terminology DICTIONARY OF HERPETOLOGY by Harvey B. Lillywhite Hardcover, 8 y2 x 11, 384 pages Orig. Ed. 2008 ISBN 1 -57524-023-8 $112.50 • Complete collection of words that are central to understanding the biology of amphibians and reptiles. • Concise and easy-to-use readable definitions in an A-to-Z format—11, 358 entries • Emphasizes terminology related to anatomy, physiology, systematics, evolution, and other disciplines, including
  • 13. newly emerged fields that are relevant to the study of amphibians and reptiles. • Essential for students, professionals, breeders, or anyone who îs interested in herpetology and its many interdisciplinary connections. To place an order and obtain shipping costs call 1 •800-724-0025 or e-mail us at: [email protected] KRIEGER PUBLISHING COMPANY P.O. Box9542 • Melbourne, Florida 32902-9542 > Tel: (321)724-9542 • Fax:(321)951-3671 < http://www.krieger-publishing.com 886 BioScience • October 2008 / Vol. 58 No. 9 www. biosciencemag. org Sheet1Thickness of Selected Sheets of Paper.Thickness0.003850.003580.003720.004180.003800.00399 0.004240.003750.004490.004220.004070.004340.003810.00421 0.003970.004250.004490.004620.004670.004040.003910.00431 0.003980.00415 Sheet2 Sheet3 A 306 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental Health Perspectives
  • 14. Environews Spheres of Influence Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City G reen roofs — rooftops that are partially or completely covered with vegetation growing in soil medium over a waterproof mem- brane—have gained momentum over the past six years as building owners recognize their advantages over conven- tional roofing in terms of better energy efficiency and reduced rain runoff. Now local governments are exploring incentives for moving the practice into the mainstream. A look at cities that are leading the country in green roof coverage reveals a growing range of policy tools. Millennium Park atop Chicago’s City Hall covers 24.5 acres. The public park includes numerous fountains, sculptures, and botanical garden spaces, as well as performance facilities, restaurants, and a skating rink. G re
  • 15. en R o o fs f o r H ea lt h y C it ie s Capital Growth Alexi Boado, low-impact development coordinator for Washington, DC’s District D e p a r t m e n t o f t h e E n v i r o n m e n t (DDOE), says the city began seriously examining green roofs for stormwater con- trol five years ago, when the DC Water and Sewer Authority provided $300,000 for green roof development as part of a
  • 16. court-ordered settlement. Those funds, managed by the nonprofit Chesapeake Bay Foundation, seeded a program of incentive grants that encouraged eight builders to choose green roofs over other traditional devices as their primary stormwater con- trol device (stormwater control plans are required for any new construction or rede- velopment of more than 5,000 square feet in the District). Builders also have a proce- dural incentive: designs that include a green roof in the stormwater control plan receive expedited processing. To build local engineering design and green construction capacity and catalyze interest in green roofs, the DDOE is work- ing with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service to offer almost $800,000 in complete design-and-build ser- vices for select public and commercial prop- erties. This program is slated to begin in the summer of 2007. In addition, as part of a cash grants program, DDOE and its sister agencies are in the process of installing green roofs on three new community recreation centers, two public schools, and one housing development. Previous grants have subsi- dized some of the first green roofs in the District, as well as the implementation of many other innovative stormwater control practices such as rain gardens and permeable surfaces. The District allotted about $500,000 in 2007 to innovative stormwater control grants in addition to the Natural Resources Conservation Service partnership.
  • 17. Dawn Gifford, program coordinator of the nonprofit DC Greenworks, has seen a shift in green roof installations from mainly commercial buildings to a mix of commer- cial and residential. DC Greenworks has dedicated itself to installing green roofs throughout the city; a high-profile demo model they installed at 1425 K Street NW in 2004 has drawn more than 3,000 visitors and inspired similar projects across the met- ropolitan area. Doug Siglin, director of federal affairs for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, explains the public policy perspective behind the interest in green roofs: one problem in the Anacostia River, which runs through Washington, DC, and in the bay generally, is too much erosion, with silt increasing water turbidity. Most erosion comes from stormwater runoff; green roofs help moder- ate that blast of runoff from precipitation events, and therefore help local governments A 308 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental Health Perspectives Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City G re en R
  • 18. o o fs f o r H ea lt h y C it ie s The Ballard Library in Seattle incorporates solar panels into its green roof design. Energy generated from these panels is fed back in to the city’s power grid. The curved roof create six microclimate conditions, each a separate exposure with differing water retention properties, based on slope and orientation. deal with rainwater by detaining, retaining, and absorbing it where it first hits. Chicago officials see another public health benefit in moderating the city’s “heat
  • 19. island” effect (defined as urban and suburban areas having temperatures up to 10°F higher than nearby rural sites). Heat islands spike energy demands, air pollution levels, and heat-related illnesses such as heat exhaustion and heat stroke. With climate change, says Sadhu Johnston, the city’s commissioner for the environment, Chicago can expect hotter and drier summers—conditions that the heat island effect will only exacerbate. Johnston says green roofs can help avert heat wave–related deaths, citing studies that show lower temperatures on green roofs compared with traditional roofs, and reduced air-conditioning use in buildings with green roofs. According to the 2004 Green Roof Test Plot 2003 End of Year Project Summary Report by environmental engineering firm MWH, which is posted on the City of Chicago website, the mean temperature of green roof areas in the heat of the day (between 12:30 and 4:30 pm) was up to 31% cooler than other roof types. Salad Days of Incentives Chicago mayor Richard Daley, Jr., installed a green roof on City Hall after returning from a 1999 visit to Europe, where he saw one in action. “That [installation] really sparked peo- ple’s imagination,” says Johnston. The city also offered grants and stormwater credits (a reduction in city fees for stormwater manage- ment) to prospective green roof owners to jumpstart the practice. Today Chicago leads
  • 20. the country in green roofs, with 300 buildings comprising some 3 million square feet of green roofing, says Johnston. Most such roofs are on commercial buildings (including Target and McDonald’s) but many are on civic buildings and smaller stores. Incentives also evolved in Portland, Oregon. Tom Liptan, an environmental specialist with the city Bureau of Environ- mental Services, says about 20 years ago the city added a floor area ratio (FAR) b o n u s t o i t s b u i l d i n g c o d e w h e r e b y builders could get permission to build extra square footage (either up or out) by employing favored practices. In the 1990s Liptan realized that European-style green roofs might help Portland with stormwater control. He put a green roof on his garage in 1996 and measured rain runoff for two years. Eventually, the city adjusted its FAR bonus to include green roofs as a favored practice. One builder who installed 4,000 square feet of green roof, for example, received permission to build an extra 12,000 square feet of building density; the builder was able to add six condo units, then selling for $395,000 each. “They spent sixty thousand dollars to get two Environmental Health Perspectives • VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 A 309 Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City (left) Stormwater flows from the green roof at Sanitation
  • 21. District No. 1 in Fort Wright, Kentucky, into a naturalized wetland, then a retention basin, a detention basin, step pools, and finally into Banklick Creek. (right) One of Washington, DC’s first green roofs was installed at 1425 K Street NW. Le ft t o r ig h t: G re en R o o fs f o r H ea lt
  • 22. h y C it ie s; D C G re en w o rk s A 310 VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 • Environmental Health Perspectives Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City A ll im ag es
  • 23. : G re en R o o fs f o r H ea lt h y C it ie s million dollars’ worth of additional sellable property,” says Liptan. Chicago likewise gives a density bonus for green roofs in its central business district, which permits developers to increase the number of units allowed on a piece of prop- erty. The city also offers an “express lane” for
  • 24. the permit process. Johnston says with a green roof in the design, “you get a dedicated team of reviewers, and you get a permit in thirty days” as compared to the typical 90 to 100 days. Plus, the city waives the develop- er’s fee for processing the building permit application. Inducements include sticks as well as car- rots. Chicago requires any developer who receives city assistance (for example, to reha- bilitate a brownfield) to include a green roof. Builders have reservations about that approach, since green roofs have a higher ini- tial cost. Stuart Match Suna, cofounder of production company Silvercup Studios, which installed a green roof on its building in Long Island City, New York, is leery of regulatory mandates. “I would be reluctant to require them,” he told the September 2006 issue Metropolis magazine. “That would make New York City that much more expensive [to rent or own property in].” Mary Margaret Hiller, marketing and com- munications director for Washington, DC–based developer Akridge, adds, “There is a premium to pay for a green roof, so I think it’s up to the developer whether they feel a green roof is necessary.” But builders also note growing client interest. “If you want to be a player, you have to be up on these technologies,” says Hiller. Akridge, for example, has gone from having no green roof designs several years
  • 25. ago to managing three green-roofed proper- ties now and developing designs for three more, including one property that will be completed next year. Tools for the Trade After years of clarifying green roof prac- tices and benefits for builders, nonprofit groups and associations are helping gov- ernments explore the economics and poli- cies affecting the technology, sometimes with industry funding. In New York City, Earth Pledge, an industry association of green builders, has worked with city offi- cials to oversee design and construction of seven roof projects on condos and apart- ment buildings in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Harlem, according to executive direc- tor Leslie Hoffman. “There is recognition that multifamily residential is a very inter- esting opportunity for green roofs,” she says, estimating that close to half of Earth Pledge’s green roof projects are on apart- ment buildings. In February 2007, Earth Pledge and the nonprofit Green Roofs for Healthy Cities received a $300,000 grant from the Home Two views of the Louisa, a Portland, Oregon, residential high- rise with 242 apartments and ground-floor retail. Other green features of the building include high-efficiency glazing, low-toxicity building materials and finishes, and locally sourced construction materials.
  • 26. Environmental Health Perspectives • VOLUME 115 | NUMBER 6 | June 2007 A 311 Spheres of Influence | Growing Green Roofs, City by City Depot Foundation to foster green infrastruc- ture in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and other cities. “We’re focused on develop- ing smart tools [for policy makers and developers],” says Hoffman. These include models that show planners how much water a green roof at a given location is likely to cap- ture, and GIS-based models that show how a larger-scale shift to green roofs would affect stormwater outflow at the watershed level. There is no national inventory of green roof policies, but in April 2007 Green Roofs for Healthy Cities launched the Green Roofs Tree of Knowledge, a database on research and policy related to green roof infrastruc- ture. At a regional level, in March 2007 the Washington, DC–based nonprofit group RESOLV prepared a report, Public Funding Incentives for Private Residential and Commercial Watershed Protection Projects, for officials in Montgomery County, Maryland. The report reviewed the region’s rules and incentives, highlighting case studies nation- wide, with the aim of improving watershed health. The report summary stresses targeting priority sub-watershed areas, voluntary action by property owners, and public education.
  • 27. Boado says the EPA is doing a similar study. Raising the Roof For everyone, the state of green roof imple- mentation is in a learning phase. “Most of the solutions we’ve come up with are home- grown,” Johnston says of Chicago’s policies. “Most we haven’t seen used in this country before.” The EPA cites green roofs as one option for ameliorating the heat island effect. Hoffman suggests that the EPA could incor- porate green roofs into incentives for cities to comply with the Clean Water Act. For example, by developing a green roof plan, a city might gain a postponement against fed- eral compliance requirements. Such an option would likely be seen as an opportuni- ty rather than a regulatory burden. This would keep the push for green roofs at the city level, where rivalries keep advance- ments bubbling. “Chicago is the leading competition for us—friendly competition,” Portland’s Liptan says. Washington’s Boado confirms this sporting element. “Chicago has thrown down the gauntlet,” he says. “We’re the nation’s capital, and we want to be the greenest city in America.” Siglin says that relatively small subsidies can nudge developers. “It’s a good policy les- son for governments,” he says: with a few grants and educational outreach, governments
  • 28. can foster a practice that reduces the public costs of managing runoff and water pollution abatement. As a policy tool, then, green roofs show unexpected potential. “That,” says Siglin, “helps the taxpayer in many ways.” David A. Taylor The green roof on the Phillips Eco-Enterprise Center in Minneapolis, stocked with native plants, educates visitors about the dimin- ishing local bedrock bluff prairie ecosystem. The roof also offers a pleasing view to passengers on the nearby elevated train. green "Green'' programs and facilities delivered by public park and recreation agencies are influencing the next wave of environmentally conscious citizens. By Judith A. Stock , Baltimore's Family Fishing Fun program introduces kids-and their parents-to the natural world.
  • 29. 6 4 P A R K S ^ R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 CARING FOR OUR ENVIRONMENT GROWING GREEN KIDS W hen Club Chameleon took its first group of kids on an overnight wilderness adventure, in 2003, the intention was to impact as many young people as possible. Today, the program, offered by the Newmarket Recreation agency in New Hampshire, reaches 215 children, ages 10-16, and has received designation by NRPA as one of 20 pilot agencies for the 2007 Teens Outside program, spon- sored in partnership v^th the Outdoor Foundation. Once a month, Club Chameleon runs a different outdoor weekend ex- perience for 20 teens and 10 staff. What keeps these kids coming back for more? The friends they make and the sense that the club belongs to them—which it does.
  • 30. One of the most successfiil things the organization did, says Anneliese Fisher, Club Chameleon director, is partner with the University of New Hampshire and its students to lead some of the wilderness adventure trips. The stu- dents receive college credits, and the children are richer for the experience. "As the program has grown, 45 of the students have become mentors to the group's kids," says Fisher. "They've donated bikes and kayaks for the chil- dren, too. We are very tied to our uni- versity community." Funding for the nonprofit Club Chameleon comes from grants and cor- porate donations, says Fisher, "so the parents don't have to pay a dime. That makes us a level playing field. The town is low-to-moderate income, and there are lots of kids who wouldn't have the opportunity to participate otherwise." Although the town of Newmarket is located 20 minutes away from the coast, three-quarters ofthe children who attend Club Chameleon have never had the opportunity to stand at the ocean's shore. For some of these kids, going hiking in the White Mountains, 45 min- utes away, was another first.
  • 31. "When we stood on top of the mountain, the look on their faces was amazement," Fisher says. "They didn't even know what was in their own back- yard. Through our program, they are being given a greater appreciation of their surroundings." The perfect opportunity for teaching stewardship principles to young chil- dren is immersing them in nature. And these kids are card-carrying members of the "Leave No Trace" national pro- gram that seeks to minimize the indi- vidual impact on the natural environ- ment. The kids don't trash the streams or break branches from the trees, and they easily police themselves and one another. The skills they learn can be used throughout their lives. Fisher says the kids work hard to- gether as a team and as they do, their self-esteem and self-confidence grow. The club is all about support to help them get through their teenage years. "At our community center, the kids constantly come in to see us," says Fisher. "Sometimes, I see their report cards before their parents do." Club members. Fisher says, feel a family-like connection and take care of each other. One day at school, for instance, a bully confronted a club
  • 32. member. Immediately, three fellow club members stepped in to stop the bully- ing and vralked the accosted member home. The club kids call Fisher "Mama Bear" because they know she will pro- tect them. A firm believer in the Richard Louv book Last Child in the Woods, which argues that children are becoming increasingly disconnected from nature, she agrees that children today don't play outside like kids used to and, consequently, their imaginations aren't being challenged. Paying it forward. Club Chameleon involves a significant community serv- ice component. Club kids engage in projects such as mentoring younger children or providing community service at town festivals. They've even adopted a 175-acre farm in Maine, where they removed old, rusted farm equipment and built a chicken coop. "Our teens don't test us," says Fisher. "They know what is being given to them, the expectations involved, and that if they don't live up to those ex- pectations, there is no more camping for them." Last weekend, on a skiing expedition. Fisher was told by the women handing out ski rentals that every one of the 20
  • 33. kids said, "please" and "thank you" when receiving his or her equipment. "These kids," says Fisher "know they are changing the way people look at teens." In Baltimore: Hook, Line, and Sinker Bob Wall, division chief of youth and adult sports at the Baltimore City De- partment of Recreation and Parks, has P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8 Peter Bergeron, 14, climbs at Pawtuckaway State Park in Raymond, N.H., as part of Club Chameleon and NRPA's Teens Outside program. run the agency's Family Fishing Fun program for the past six years. As an anchor agency in tbe Take Me Fishing^"^ initiative, a national strategy of NRPA and the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation (RBFF) aimed at introducing and growing participa- tion in boating and fishing, Wall has been able to increase the reach of the fishing program and make it available to Baltimore families on Tuesday evenings during the months of May, June, September, and October. Families meet at the Patterson Park Boat Lake, where participants are furnished with a
  • 34. rod, reel, and bait, and spend two hours fishing in this catch-and-release park program. Some families bring a picnic dinner, using the tables scattered around the lake. "This program has been really suc- cessful," says Wall. "We talk to the kids about how to keep the environment clean, and we have [them] pick up any trash lying around." The summer fishing program targets kids ages 3 and older. All 46 recreation centers throughout the city offer the opportunity to schedule a fisbing trip at Patterson Park Boat Lake, which is located on three acres in the heart of Baltimore. "During this program, we partner with the Audubon Society and take two groups of children from different cen- ters, 15 kids in each group," explains Wall. "We take one group, and the Audubon volunteers take the other. We take our kids fishing, and the other group goes bird-watching or does an environmentally related arts and crafts program." Patterson Park, where the lake is located, is one of the oldest parks in Baltimore, encompassing 155 acres. It was designed as a smaller version of
  • 35. New York's Central Park. After offering the fishing program for five years, it became obvious to park officials that if the program were to go forward at Patterson Park Boat Lake, the facility would need some serious attention, perhaps even a facelift. Sixty percent of the lake had become choked off with cattails and lily pads, and sedi- ment badly needed to be removed from the bottom. To keep young children from falling into deep water, the shore- line had to be altered to meet safety requirements. "Last year we had about 3,500 kids come through tbe program, ages 3 to teens," says Wall. Much of the increase can be attributed to Baltimore's anchor agency status with NRPA and RBFF, through which it received grant funding to expand community fishing pro- grams. The principles of a successful, engag- ing stewardship program for children include organization, community involvement, and partnerships. As is the case with many programs. Wall cautions against trying to go it alone. Instead, he says, consider devel- oping support groups. For the Balti- more fishing program, having the 800-
  • 36. member Friends of Patterson Park as an ally is a tremendous bonus. Program leaders have found another friend in Tochterman's Tackle Shop, a small, 95-year-old, family-owned fish- ing tackle shop near the park that's been quite generous across the years. "We have never paid for any bait, and that is a whole lot of worms and night crawlers," says Wall. "Our town has an initiative to make Baltimore greener," says Wall. "We are planting an enormous amount of trees to regain our canopy. Aesthetically, if the eye sees trees and not just buildings, it will be a more pleasing sight. And, 66 P A R K S E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8 since the park is only two miles from the city center and the famed harbor area of Baltimore, the city's enhance- ment would benefit the park." In the end, the most important fea- ture of the fishing program is that the kids who attend "will teach their chil- dren to be greener and more environ- mentally friendly," says Wall. "The greener the kids, the better off everyone will be. There will be a lot more job opportunities for people who under-
  • 37. stand the environment" Wall gauges the fishing program's success by the number of smiles he sees—and by the number of kids who come back. "We always keep 40 fishing rods on hand, but I know a kid is really interested when he brings his own fish- ing rod," says Wall. "Get them hooked on fishing and that will keep them away from all the bad influences." Growing Lifelong Stewards "It's our mission to instill a sense of stewardship in our community so that throughout the children's lifetime, they can make good environmental deci- sions," says Katie Shaw, nature center manager for Walker Nature Education Center in Reston, Va. "Those are the things I hope they take away with them. That, and a great desire to learn about nature." The center's director for 17 years, Shaw says kids find out quickly from their programs that nature puts every- one involved on equal footing. "You don't have to be the smartest or the fastest," she says. "You can just be you." Shaw likes the fact that the nature center introduces children to the envi- ronment at an early age, when they are most impressionable, explaining, "We start our lS-month-olds out in our
  • 38. Babies in the Woods program," where participants are exposed to sensory experiences in a series of one-hour pro- grams that let them hear, see, touch, and smell their surroundings. "We have learning stations and, as often as possi- ble, in good weather, we take them out on the trail," says Shaw. The core programs include Nature With a sense of stewardship in the community, children will make a lifetime's worth of good environmental decisions. Tots, geared toward 3- to 5-year-olds who can come to the nature center's camp during the summer, and field trips for elementary school children in the spring and fall. "With our teens, we do the work-learn experience, and, as they move toward adulthood, we offer summer jobs for teens and internships Children's Play Structures WE SHIP & INSTALL WORLDWIDE We design, manufacture and install play structures foM community centers, parks, schools and day cares. We adhere to ASTM, CPRA, IPEMA safety guidelines. International Play Company Tel: 604-882-1188 Fax: 604-882-1977 Email: [email protected]
  • 39. www.iplayco.com t C I R C L E 4 5 O N P R O D U C T I N f O R M A T I O N C A R D O R V I S I T W W W . N R P A . O R G / F R E E I N F 0 High Performance. No Maintenance. Enhance any environment with Venus' Planters and Trash Receptacles, So durable they're guaranteed for 20 years. Valley Vj www.valleyviewind.com ph 800-323-9369 C I R C L E 4 4 ON P R O D U C T I N F O R M A T I O N C A R D OR V I S I T WWW-NftPA.OftG/FREEINFO P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8 A camper explores aquatic life in a Reston, Va., stream. with college students," she says. All ofthe center's programs take place trailside within the facility's 72- acre site, and are built around a four- stage model that includes awareness, appreciation, knowledge, and action. Shaw advises taking advantage ofthe teachable moments by presenting pro- grams that supplement the auditory, visual, and tactile experience. "This is
  • 40. the key" she suggests. "When you get auditory, visual, and tactile in one pro- gram, this is when you know your important message will be retained." In measuring a program's success, Shaw uses two methods, one formal and the other informal. She first sug- gests getting written evaluations from staff, teachers, and parents. To illustrate the informal method, Shaw relates a coincidental meeting with a parent in the grocery store: "The parent told me their kid went into biology in college because ofthe camp program." With a strong stewardship program, says Shaw, "you make the right envi- ronmental choices. You hear all the time that everyone makes a difference, but when it comes to the environment, it really is true. It's about the legacy we leave behind." NRPA: Where the Kids Are Outdoors SaJd Sajai Wise Kids *̂̂̂̂ Outdoors It's a fact: Children today are spending less time outdoors engaged In sponta- neous play, NRPA and the Sajai"^" Founda- tion are partnering to reconnect kids with
  • 41. the natural environment. This exciting new program will have them exploring nature outside their door while it teaches them about the importance of eating right and being physically active. Each session engages kids in outdoor adventure mis- sions guided by trained recreation staff, and is sure to get them excited about their natural surroundings. For more information, visit www.nrpa.org/wisekids. OUTDOOR INDUSTRY F O U N D A T I O N Teens Outside Teens Outside is a program that introduces youth ages 11 -17 to outdoor recreation through sustained, season-long experi- ences in hiking, camping, climbing, biking,
  • 42. paddling, and other activities with the goal of fostering a new generation of out- door enthusiasts. Through an NRPA part- nership with the Outdoor Foundation, the program was piloted in 2007 with 20 park and recreation agencies across the coun- try. By the end of the year, the Teens Out- side program had succeeded in involving more than 3,560 teens and 250 mentors in outdoor experiences. NRPA and the Outdoor Foundation are working to fine- tune and expand the program to include additional agencies, and intend to incorpo- rate a community and environmental stewardship pillar. For more information, visit www.nrpa.org/teensoutside. Take Me Fishing^"
  • 43. NRPA and the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation (RBFF) are partnering to get kids outdoors through boating and fishing. The Take Me Fishing^"^ initiative aims to give hectic families an opportunity to reconnect in an outdoor setting, teach youth new life skills, and incorporate fish- ing and boating as part of a healthy life- style. In its two years, this initiative has reached more than 300 park and recre- ation agencies, engaging some 90,000 youth ages 6-11. NRPA and RBFF have a strong commitment to initiatives that focus on youth and the outdoors, foster future anglers, and provide education on environmental conservation. The 2008 program is set to launch in the coming months.
  • 44. Look for more information at www.nrpa.org/fishing. 68 P A R K S R E C R E A T I O N A P R I L 2 0 0 8 Running head: TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 1 Technology Is Transferring Human Education to Computers Student Name Columbia Southern University TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 2 Technology Is Transferring Human Education to Computers Technology is used every day. As time passes and technology becomes increasingly more
  • 45. advanced, humans also become increasingly more dependent on that technology. This can be a good thing because technology has the potential to make life considerably easier, but this can also cause a deficiency in the human race, beginning at a basic level: children. One of the major benefits of technology has been education in an online setting. However, this is also one of the possibilities of deficiency in public interaction with other humans, stemming from elementary schools. The foundation of this paper will examine both, while elaborating on the psychological aspect of childhood de-socialization upon integrating them fully into the online setting, thereby negating their human interactive development by natural socialization processes. I hope that my research will go on to delay and even inhibit altogether the addition of primary schools to a solely online setting. As an advocate for higher education in this setting, this paper will also campaign against lawmakers who would seek to implement this style of learning into the primary school levels due to the damage that it could inflict on the young.
  • 46. This topic originated from personal experience in online learning and the benefits of such a flexible learning style for the active life of an average adult with a profession, a family, and various other daily demands on their time. The opposition being that of a teenager straight out of high school, attending a traditional brick and mortar type college/university, without the cares of an adult life yet. My passion comes from my direct experience in both a traditional college and the online college experience. Additionally, I have a unique viewpoint as that of a previously younger student from my primary/middle school days. I was able to see the differences in the public school system and the private school system and can therefore correlate this difference to being equal to that of the differences in online and traditional colleges. This gives me a stronger TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 3 opinion of instilling socialization skills in children at an early age. Finally, my college study of psychology, which is defined as “the scientific study of
  • 47. behavior and mental processes” (Matlin, 1999, p. 4) has illuminated the necessity of socialization as children, and the possibilities for abnormal personality disorders that can manifest from the lack of early childhood socialization (Nevid, Rathus, & Greene, 2008). The tentative argument of this topic is based on the progression of schools that have already conformed to the online setting. Gwinnett County, Georgia has already implemented fully online high schools, and there is information regarding the full implementation of elementary schools as well. The information that I intend to argue with this paper will illuminate the negative effects of this action, by demonstrating the psychological aspects of our basic human need for socialization (Macionis, 2009). The world’s growing reliance on technology is transitioning human education to becoming fully online, for all age and education levels, thereby removing the socialization necessary for human public interaction. This statement will be the basis of my research of this
  • 48. topic. With the discussion of socialization, I intend to demonstrate that we as humans “need social experience to learn [our] culture and to survive” (Macionis, 2009, p. 72). TECHNOLOGY IN HUMAN EDUCATION 4 Reference Macionis, J. (2009). Society the basics (10th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall. Matlin, M. E., (1999). Psychology (3rd ed.). Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace College. Nevid, J. S., Rathus, S. A., & Greene, B. (2009). Abnormal psychology in a changing world (Custom ed.). New York, NY: Pearson Prentice Hall. Purpose: The purpose of the Research Proposal is to mold the preliminary ideas you have about your topic and to develop them in an academic manner. This development occurs as a direct result of your research on the subject. Therefore, this is your first formal
  • 49. articulation of your project. The Research Proposal is the next step towards writing assignments that will help you construct your Research Paper. Description: In this 500-600-word, essay-style Research Proposal, you will develop the project that you intend to write about for your final Research Paper for this course. If your Research Proposal is less than this word count, then it is likely you have not fully developed your proposal or adhered to the assignment appropriately, which can severely impact your grade for this assignment. Your Research Proposal will include the elements listed below. Your Research Proposal should also include a list of references in APA style and should adhere to APA convention throughout for in-text citation and style. When you write for academic or public audiences, it is imperative that you are supported by voices other than your own. In other words, even if you are an expert, you still must support your assertions. In a Research Proposal, the same is true. For this assignment, you will include at least one source in your description of your tentative argument. The source cannot be yourself, an interview, or your text book. You must research your topic in order to gain a valid academic source that speaks to your topic in some way. Elements: Your Research Proposal grade will be largely based on your inclusion of the elements listed below, as well as your development of the project. For assistance, you might want to refer to Chapter 1, Section 1a, of The Little, Brown Compact Handbook with Exercises (pp. 3-4). Your Research Proposal must contain the following elements: 1. Cover page and APA formatting: You will include an APA-style cover page for your Research Proposal. See the example on page 16 of The CSU APA Guide (6th edition). Your cover page should include the following: the title of your future Research Paper (this may be changed as your project develops), your name, and the name of your university
  • 50. (Columbia Southern University). The cover page must also include a running head which should include up to 50 characters from the title of the paper, along with a sequential page number in the upper right-hand corner. You can find instructions for formatting the running head on pp. 9-11 of The CSU APA Guide. 2. Purpose: Review the purpose statement on p. 333 of Strategies for Writing Successful Research Papers. You may also want to refer to Chapter 1, Section 1c of The Little, Brown Compact Handbook with Exercises (pp. 6-7). The following questions should be addressed in the first paragraph of your Research Proposal, which should be dedicated to establishing your purpose for doing this particular project. • What is your rationale for this project? • What do you hope to learn from the project, or what to do you want to see happen as a result of it? • Who is your audience for this project? Chapter 1, Section 1d, of The Little, Brown Compact Handbook with Exercises (pp. 7- 8) • What role will you play in this project: investigator or advocate? 3. Statement of qualification: Address the following questions as they are applicable to your project. • What is your investment in the topic? • What personal experience do you bring to the topic? • What special qualities do you bring to the project? • How might your investment, experience, and special qualities make you particularly apt at developing this project?
  • 51. 4. Tentative argument: Your final Research Paper for this course will be an argumentative, research-based, academic paper. While it is unlikely that you will have a concrete idea of what your entire argument will be at this point in the writing process, it is necessary for you to articulate your argument as you understand it to be right now. Address the following questions. • What is the context surrounding your topic? In other words, is there some event that was a catalyst for bringing your topic into the public eye? (Optional) • What is your explanation or definition of the topic? • What is your analysis of the specific issue surrounding your topic? • What is your tentative thesis statement or hypothesis? 5. References: Include a references list as the last page of your Research Proposal. See the example on pages 6, 7, and 21 of The CSU APA Guide (6th edition). All entries are those that have been cited in the text. No others are to be included. No textbooks should be included on the r Topics Inventory 1. Academic studies Personal interest: The French Language Academic subject: The French Language, Culture, History and Politics Possible topics: "Teaching the English Language in France" "Expat living in France" "International Business" 2. Social issue Personal interest: Green Living
  • 52. Social issue: The Government Implementing Green Living into our EverydayLives. Possible topics: "Teaching Grade School Kids the Importance of Green Living" "Planting Organic Gardens within Urban City Vacant fields, Lots and Rooftops. "Implement a Law Making Recycling Mandatory Nationwide" 3. Scientific subject Personal interest: Conserving Energy Scientific subject: Finding other Alternatives to using Oil for Energy Possible topics: "Burning Fuel Low in Toxins" "The Use of Recycle Products to be used as Fossil Fuel" "Learn ways of Using Electric Energy to help with the Worlds Pollution Problem. 4. Cultural background Personal interest: Multi-racial and Cultured Cultural background: Multi-racial to be Recognized Worldwide Possible topics: "How America became a Melting Pot" "How being multi-racial have impacted the Census Bureau. "The History of New Orleans, its Culture and People"
  • 53. Controlling Idea Statement Enthymeme: The introduction of “Green Living” into the American school system is very critical in teaching the importance of recycling; green living and keeping the environment clean to our youths. Earth Day is a prime example of encouraging individuals, including adolescences the importance of saving the future of our planet Earth, ourselves and the generation to follow. Again, it is very important that our schools introduce to our children green living, re-cycling, organic gardening and how to become better at being aware of their surrounding and planet. This is the beginning of turning the entire world green, one child at a time. Short Proposal American schools are cultivating to the green living lifestyle. Environmental education is becoming more evident in educating today’s school-age children. National Green week introduced the term “Green Living” to students and the importance of how an eco-lifestyle is beneficial to preserving our planet and ourselves. The purpose of my paper is to help enlighten the parents, school system and the public about the importance of teaching children an eco-lifestyle at a very young age. Educating individuals at a very young age can be extremely difficult and trying. This is because tradition is being broken due to the fact, we live within a society where everything is instant, disposable and easy accessible. This can make it very difficult to train a child in the importance of saving our planet. Children of today is used to everything happening at a very fast pace. We have to teach
  • 54. them a lot of our everyday items we use or consume daily can actually harm or be detrimental to our environment and their health. In my paper, I will speak as an advocate for the “Green Living” lifestyle. I will write about the consequences of what to expect if we continue to live as human beings the same way we have been living for the last decades and third what we can do to combat this problem starting with teaching the eco- friendly way of living to our grade-school kids. The campaign for the education of green living for our youths should start from at home. Organizers encourage adults to lead by example. It is very imperative for families to teach their children to practice green living, and become an advocacy for environmental awareness at home.