The Environment  •  Peace & Non-violence • Culture & Diversity

Humanity & Environment • Community Building • Sustainability

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Welcome to ICEE

The Institute for Culture and Environmental Education (ICEE) improves the quality of education by offering applied learning programs for teachers in cultural and environmental education. The programs are designed to provide teachers with the knowledge, skills and critical thinking to teach multicultural and environmental awareness to children in their community and throughout the world.

 

(ICEE), addresses global issues at their core. We encourage students to develop their critical thinking skills and to envision solutions to systems that perpetuate discrimination, injustice and degradation to the environment. This is accomplished through an applied learning in Culture and Environmental Education, a comprehensive field of study and approach to teaching that draws connections between environmental issues, cultural issues, peace and non-violence, and community building and sustainability. It explores how we might reunite the world by understanding how culture and the environment play an integral role in tolerance, peace, and prosperity for the planet.

This program invites you to turn your passion into creative solutions, to implement these solutions in your community, and gain skills and tools that will allow you to teach the children of our future so that their life choices can help improve the world. Culture and Environmental Education is a promising and gratifying method of achieving sustainability, tolerance, and peace.

You’ll learn how to teach about the issues, develop curriculum and foster values and beliefs in children that will allow a brighter future.

The knowledge base of Environmental Education is drawn from the field of sustainability, cultural studies and peace studies. The courses will teach you presentation and implementation skills as well as knowledge of issues

 

 

Healing the broken bond between our young and nature is in everyone’s self-interest, not only because aesthetics or justice demand it, but also because our mental, physical and spiritual health depend upon it.

Richard Louv,
Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature- Deficit Disorder

 

Here are some ways to promote tolerance for others, suggested by family psychologist John Rosemond and others:

  • Talk about differences among people with your child. Don't say, "People are all the same." Although we share some of the same needs and drives, people are different.
  • Remind your children that what's important about a person is what's inside, not outside. Help them look beyond the surface in understanding others.
  • A person's race, gender, or physical condition should never be the basis for ridicule or rejection.
  • Teach children to put themselves in another person's place and try to see life from that viewpoint.
  • Point out prejudice when it happens and discuss it with your children. Encourage them to speak up when they see someone, especially another child, being treated unfairly.
  • Discuss how certain cultural patterns have developed or have been influenced by such things as climate, history, condition of the land, inventions, language, literature, and art.
  • Take pride in your cultural heritage and share it with your children. Music is a good place to begin. For example, teachers found that the Mexican children of Los Angeles seemed to have more self-esteem and pride in their cultural heritage after a local radio station changed their format to Musica de Ranchero (slow Mexican Country).
  • Visit museums, festivals, ethnic restaurants, and other places that expose your family to different customs and lifestyles.
  • Try to have direct contact with people whose cultures or lifestyles are different from your own. Children are less likely to fear what they know. Some churches, 4-H offices, and other organizations often arrange youth exchanges. These might be across town or around the world.
  • Introduce children to good books. Libraries have sensitively written books on topics that their classmates cope with daily.
  • Avoid stereotypes within your own family. Expect sons as well as daughters to help with household chores, such as laundry and dishes. Encourage daughters to excel at subjects, such as science and math, and to participate in sports.
  • Help your children develop self-confidence. Insecure people are more likely to be obsessed with conformity. Self-worth will also help children handle insults and bias from others.
  • Share with your children how you coped when treated unfairly. They need to understand there are some mean people in this world, but this meanness and ignorance has nothing to do with your child's worth.
  • Using a world map, play games such as "Name that Country."
  • You and your child might volunteer at a community center for another culture. Teach English, your special skill, or share a hobby.
 
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