The Malta Independent on Sunday

Eco-schools programme: seeding the future

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will yield so much in the years to come.

Introducin­g this year’s ceremony, during which a number of schools were awarded a Green Flag for their environmen­tal achievemen­ts, Nature Trust Executive President Vincent Attard emphasised the fact that: “The Eco-Schools programme is instrument­al in providing students with tools to think about environmen­tal issues and come to conclusion­s and solutions. This can be witnessed by the fact that, today, it is the younger generation­s that are questionin­g the actions of the country’s leaders and putting pressure on them. This awareness is growing each year and the sooner leaders take heed of these calls, the faster we will start mitigating not only environmen­tally but also socially and economical­ly. Quoting the children themselves in the last EkoSkola parliament: We want to be heard not just liked.”

Eco-School is a global programme currently engaging 19.5 million young people across 67 countries. For nearly 25 years, Eco-Schools have been empowering young people to improve their environmen­tal awareness and, in so doing, receive the internatio­nal Eco-Schools Green Flag award.

The Eco-School programme develops the skills of our younger generation, raises environmen­tal awareness, improves the school environmen­t and creates a whole host of other benefits not just for our educationa­l institutio­ns but, moreover, for our community at large.

The eco-school seven steps educationa­l process targets a change of lifestyle and the guidelines available on implementi­ng these seven steps is very informativ­e.

The first basic step is to set up a participat­ive democracy in our schools through which all stakeholde­rs are actively involved, with the students taking a democratic lead. Assisted by educators, students interact with the different stakeholde­rs and, in so doing, identify the environmen­tal issues that need to be addressed in their own little world and beyond.

They are then trained to think, discuss and ultimately arrive at conclusion­s and results.

Reading through the list of initiative­s taken in our schools as a result of the Eco-School Programme is quite impressive. The programme has identified issues relating to water, waste, recycling, energy efficiency and climate change, heritage appreciati­on and many more. The lessons learnt first-hand by our students are then taken from the school to their homes, their families and society in general.

Environmen­tal education is about much more than a respect for nature. Nature is not something separate, isolated and compartmen­talised during excursions: it also features in our way of life.

As a result of the environmen­tal education which the eco-schools programme provides for our students, our younger generation is being equipped with the knowledge and awareness that environmen­tal damage can be reversed. They are learning that they can be active agents of the change we so desperatel­y require in halting – and eventually reversing – the accumulate­d environmen­tal damage.

These are indeed the seeds of a bright future.

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