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Educating for our future! 2018 Best Chapter Education Project Award

The President’s Hoot
by Richard H. Baker, Ph.D.
November 2018

Audubon Florida presented the Best Chapter Education Project of the Year Award to our chapter at the Audubon Assembly on October 20, 2018.   This was our fifth award our chapter has received in the last four years and 12th for the last 16 years. This award was for our multifaceted education program to educate our whole community about conservation of our paradise. Our educational goal is to provide folks of all ages with a science-based understanding of local natural resources and restoration practices that safeguard the health and vigor of these environmental resources. All our programs relate local conservation to our goals for Education, Advocacy, and Public Awareness.

Children oriented educational programs:

Audubon Advocates afterschool program

Adult programs: We offer many courses in environmental education for the public:

We have laid the foundation for our student advocates program for next and future years. Through our student programs we help improve their science vocabulary scores in their school classes, particularly the scores for female and minority students. We can also measure success by the funding support we have received. Indian River County School District continues to be a significant partner in our afterschool programs. To fund these educational efforts depends upon membership funds and substantial grants from:

Education is essential for us all in the community to learn how we can work together to protect our health, conserve our environment, so our waters and lands will be clean and environmental habitats will encourage wildlife that is the basis for not only our pleasure but the basis for our economy and future of our community. The future depends upon all of us working together, collaborating with other organizations so that they too can be involved to protect our waters and to ‘green’ the whole county, to attract wildlife, preserve habitats, reduce water and energy use, and by preventing pollution into the environment by non-native plants that require heavy use of pesticides, fertilizers and water.  A major educational effort will be needed to make this year’s “100,000 Trees for Life” program successful, and help everyone understand how to plant and care for a tree and our environment; how trees sequester carbon, reduce temperatures in our communities, and save our precious water.  Trees being highly visible and life producing will help educate the community for us and bring many out into nature.

With the show of confidence that many organizations have demonstrated in our education and outreach programs and in our all-inclusive programs we will expand our efforts to reach more students of all ages. Audubon House is a key piece in our community providing a special opportunity, demonstrating how people and nature can thrive and work together.  Our major goal continues to be to provide Indian River County residents – especially students and their families’ – education opportunities to explore our natural world so that everyone can work together and make intelligent choices for the future.

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