Niue1.jpg

This article includes information from earlier versions of the Sustainable community action wiki. There may be a case for merging this article with Education. If you would like to discuss this proposal, please comment via the talk page

What communities can do

Template:Topico

  • Eco-Schools
  • Permaculture
  • Sustainability education centres
  • Adult education courses
  • School breakfast clubs
  • promote sustainable and safe travel to school

Campaigns

School strike for climate

School strike for climate, also known in various regions as Fridays for the Future, Youth for climate or Youth strike 4 climate, is a growing international movement of children and students leaving their school to take part in demonstrations for climate action.

The first school strike for climate was started by Greta Thunberg staging an action outside the Swedish Riksdag (parliament), holding a sign that read "Skolstrejk för klimatet" or "school strike for climate" during August 2018. W

Schools for Climate Action

Why it matters

article needed, see also Appropedia's Education article

Eco-Schools

Eco-Schools is an international programme of the Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE) that aims to empower students to be the change our sustainable world needs by engaging them in fun, action-oriented learning. Each school follows a seven step change process and empowers their young people to lead processes and actions wherever they can. Over time and through commitment to the Eco-Schools seven-step process, improvements will be seen in both the learning outcomes, attitude and behaviour of students and the local community and ultimately the local environment. Evidence of success in these areas will eventually lead to a school being awarded ‘The Green Flag’.

Eco-Schools has been implemented in 58 countries, involving 46,000 schools. W

School breakfast club

A School breakfast club is a provision for children to eat a healthy breakfast in a safe environment before their first class. The term "breakfast club" is commonly used to describe such facilities in the United Kingdom.

Breakfast clubs are generally considered to enhance both academic performance and behavior, especially for children whose parents might not otherwise be able to afford to provide them with regular meals. Breakfast provision is however less prevalent compared with school lunch, both in the UK and worldwide. As of 2013, only about half the school children in the UK have access to a breakfast club.

Attendance of a breakfast club is not mandatory; many parents prefer to feed their children at home. The clubs are often run by schools, but can also be community run. Schools themselves are the most common location for breakfast clubs, but they can also be found in churches, community halls or even commercial premises. Breakfast clubs are sometimes open to children from more than one school. W

InternationalSchoolMealsDayLaunchEvent.jpg

Resources

Quotes

"We don’t see things as they are,
we see them as we are." Anais Nin

Research

Project: What Makes a Town Sustainable? The Economics Network

Video

Error in widget YouTube: Unable to load template 'wiki:YouTube'

News and comment

2019

Middelgrunden wind farm 2009.jpg

Oct 10 How has Denmark become regularly the happiest nation in the world? Empathy classes at school help [1]

2018

How the 'Walking School Bus' promotes a safe and healthy commute for kids, Jan 29 [2]

Rue Duluth, Montréal.jpg

Concordia University's discussion series brings Montreal residents together for shared learning, Jan 24 [3]

2017

Boat Houses at Brighton Beach.jpg

Victoria (Australia): Monash to become Australia’s first 100 per cent renewable energy powered university, Oct 9 [4]

Brocks Hill Environmental Centre - geograph.org.uk - 12886.jpg

Schools are going green and here is how, Sep 12 [5]

Budapest1.jpg

Hungary: Make universities, students and communities work together – a how-to, Jun 27 [6]

2016

Could Urban Farms Be the Preschools of the Future?, March 7 [7]

This preschool doubles as an urban farm, Feb 25 [8]

See also

Interwiki links

Wikipedia: Problem-based learning and Ecological Economics, Workers' Educational Association

Wikiversity, a Wikimedia Foundation project that supports learning communities, their learning materials, and resulting activities. It differs from more structured projects such as Wikipedia in that it instead offers a series of tutorials, or courses, for the fostering of learning, rather than formal content. W

WikiEducator, international online community project for the collaborative development of learning materials, which educators are free to reuse, adapt and share without restriction. W

External links

  • Foundation for Environmental Education, non-governmental, non-profit organisation promoting sustainable development through environmental education. FEE is active in five programmes; Blue Flag, Eco-Schools, Young Reporters for the Environment (YRE), Learning about Forests (LEAF) and Green Key. W


References Template:Attrib sca ref


Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.