1. Find ways to encourage students’ environmental interests on issues that are personally meaningful to them
2. Include classroom activities that create a framework for learning global citizenry skills
3. Identify skills that require students to grow to be global citizens, name them and their applications.
4. Ask them to define their own cultural identity and share that with other students
5. Find a way to ask students to share pertinent non-western perspectives to intercultural communication activities, incorporate “culturally responsive teaching”
6. Help students understand general workplace language, skills and dynamics as foundation skills that will assist them anywhere on the globe.
7. Introduce key vocabulary (sustainability, waste, excess, green, recyclable, trade-offs, long term, short term, consumption, consumer, social responsibility, fair trade)
8. Ask them to make an environmental pledge (I will put all plastic bottles in a recycle bin, not a garbage can)
9. Ask them to make a list of services we get for free from the environment
10. Learn how to be a wise consumer, spend with a conscious
11. Encourage some kind of action as a new production of knowledge
12. Study the city or school’s recycling policies
13. Help make the classroom more efficient for recycling and energy
14. Have the class design an informative display/bulletin board about their learning on recycling
15. Encourage welcome groups for new students
16. Promote activities that encourage student leadership
Living and working only within their own ethnic community or not integrating means that they don’t take a leadership role in the community. It could take one or more generations to understand roles and civic responsibilities. Ethnic community groups don’t know how develop leaders that can take a role both inside the group and outside to the larger community. Hence a diverse city needs to understand global citizenship leadership qualities and build consensus with other minority ethnic groups in the community to get their issues heard and understood rather than continue to be marginalized.
17. Discuss choices people/government/and communities make about the environment, the tradeoffs and connections
18. Elicit information from the class and write about something from a totally different point of view than people are used to
19. Have a group of students try to point to places on a map with a pencil. Each person has a string attached to the pencil. Do it with a rubber band. Do it blindfolded. Do it with your hands tied behind your back. This really shows how we must try to act in concert. (Idea from Dr. Reckmeyere.)
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