Birmingham Post

Future fears as nature words erased from junior dictionary

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to the contrary, you would think though that there is no nature in towns.

This prejudice (that’s what I have come to call it) is reinforced in many ways.

The Government’s nature conservati­on policies and practices for instance, what there is of them, are the responsibi­lity of the Department for the Environmen­t, Food and Rural affairs.

I came across another example recently when revisiting the furore over the Oxford Junior Dictionary systematic­ally, over a period of years, removing many words related to nature.

The dictionary contains about 10,000 words, and is intended for use by seven-year-olds. Amongst the words removed are heron, kingfisher, lark, magpie, minnow, newt, otter, blackberry, dandelion, acorn, sycamore and willow.

According to Vineeta Gupta, who heads children’s dictionari­es at Oxford University Press, changes in the world are responsibl­e for changes in the book. “When you look back at older versions of dictionari­es, there were lots of examples of flowers for instance,” she said.

“That was because many children lived in semi-rural environmen­ts and saw the seasons. Nowadays, the environmen­t has changed.”

The double-whammy here is the loss of the words and the false rationale for this.

The words I have quoted (there are many more that fit the same category) are all things that are commonly found in towns and cities, including Birmingham and the Black Country, many indeed in gardens and parks. Some of them are far more numerous here than in the supposedly wildlife-rich countrysid­e.

As for not seeing the seasons, it beggars belief that anyone should think that that is the case.

It makes it more difficult for our children to develop love for, joy in, and understand­ing and appreciati­on of, the natural world when access to informatio­n is taken away like this.

It appears that the dead hand of utilitaria­n education is stifling the determined effort of conservati­on bodies, like the Wildlife Trusts and the RSPB, to inspire future generation­s about the nature around them. Peter Shirley is a Midland-based

conservati­onist

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