Link to JSU Field Schools Homepage

Director's Message
Welcome to the JSU Field Schools’ Newsletter. Through this high-tech form of communication we hope to keep you in touch with some low-tech things like wildflowers, bird migration, and hiking. We’d like your feedback on our programs, news and information. Most importantly, read and incorporate our existing programs into your personal calendars. Then call or e-mail us to sign up and participate. It is our goal to get you outdoors and in touch with some special places and interesting people.

       Pete Conroy
       Director, JSU Field Schools

Book Review:
Last Child in the Woods

An environmentally relevant book was released in 2005 that speaks to the importance and necessity of connecting children and nature. The story is not about linking people with nature to “help” nature…it is about the NEED we have for nature ourselves because we are a part of nature. According to author Richard Louv, many of our environmental problems are a result of our estranged relationship with the natural world because we look at people and nature through separate lenses rather than seeing a relationship where we are part of a greater whole. He describes a disconcerting societal shift in how children experience the world around them. Instead of climbing trees, fishing, tromping through the woods, building forts and catching frogs, most children remain inside or do not have the same opportunities they did 30 years ago. Louv sites numerous reasons such as liability concerns, lack of wooded areas and ponds in our neighborhoods, overly busy family schedules, the attraction of electronics, and some media exposure that has created a “bogeyman syndrome.” One child that he interviewed summed up Louv’s concern when the child said, “I like playing inside because that is where the electric outlets are.” We highly recommend reading Richard Louv’s "The Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder". Meanwhile, you can rest assured that the JSU Field Schools are dedicated to creating educational and entertaining opportunities for children and adults to experience, immerse, and possibly reacquaint themselves with nature in all of her splendid diversity!

    Renee Morrison
    Coordinator, JSU Field Schools

Upcoming Events

Time to reflect -- nature journal hiike coming in April 2006

Quarterly Quote
“There was a child went forth every day,

And the first object he look’d upon, that object he became,

And that object became part of him for the day or a certain part of the day,

Or for many years or stretching cycles of years.

The early lilacs became part of this child,

And grass and white and red morning glories, and white and red clover,

And the song of the phoebe-bird,

And the Third-month lambs and the sow’s pink-faint litter;

And the mare’s foal and the cow’s calf…”

~ Walt Whitman Enjoying all creatures big and small.
This e-newsletter is brought to you by:
Little River Canyon Field School
Jacksonville State University
700 Pelham Road North, Suite 246 Martin Hall
Jacksonville, AL  36265-1602
Phone:  (256) 782-5681
Fax: (256) 782-5817
e-mail:  fieldschool@jsu.edu
web: http://fieldschool.jsu.edu
If you do not wish to receive this newsletter,
please send us an e-mail at the above address.

Experience to enrich lives and knowledge to replace fear.

For a complete description of our programs,
visit our web site:
http://fieldschool.jsu.edu
Link to Anniston Museum of Natural History
link to National Park Service
link to JSU
link to US Forest Service
link to Alabama State Parks