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Rachel Patton has been named Kentucky’s M.K. Dickerson Outstanding Educator for Excellence in Environmental Education. The award, given by the Kentucky Association for Environmental Education, recognizes individuals, schools, and businesses that exemplify dedication, commitment, and influence in the field of environmental education.


Since 2018, Rachel has been an environmental educator for Bluegrass Greensource with a focus on preschool education, visiting schools and classes throughout the organization’s 20-county service region. “I have the opportunity to visit thousands of students each year, primarily in preschool and elementary school,” Rachel says, “and it’s so exciting to watch them form connections and make discoveries about the world around them, hear their questions and stories, and help facilitate their investigations. Although I visit each class with a plan, the students' questions and ideas shape our experiences, which keeps things exciting!


Rachel has been part of the EE community since 2014, when she went through a training in Project Learning Tree. During her years as a student teacher, a public school employee, and through her work at an early care and education center, she incorporated EE activities as often as she could.


Since joining BGGS, Rachel has developed a robust preschool education program, first through the development of the Junior Nature Program and then with the development of the Junior Energy Program. The Junior Nature Explorers program teaches preschool students about the importance of shortleaf pine/oak savanna and riparian forests, as well as the umbrella species (bobwhite quail, prairie warbler, hellbenders, and native Kentucky mussels). By reaching PreK students during the earliest stages of learning and encouraging the integration of the natural world surrounding them, the program provides a solid foundation on which future learning and appreciation of these ecosystems and species are built. (One of the highlights of the program is the incubation of Bob White Quail in preschool classrooms!)


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The Junior Energy Explorers (JEE) curriculum provides preschool teachers with accessible, experiential activities to introduce basic concepts of energy to young children. A review of the literature confirms this is a novelty: existing energy studies with children primarily focus on conservation. JEE, on the other hand, provides opportunities to experiment with water, wind, and solar energies through cross-curricular activities.


“Bluegrass Greensource has had a robust energy program for intermediate, middle, and high school students,” Rachel says. “Upon seeing the success of that program and our preschool nature-focused program, the folks at Kentucky’s Office of Energy Policy approached us about building a preschool energy curriculum. Our team rose to the challenge and has developed a one-of-a-kind program that engages preschoolers and their teachers and families.”


Under Rachel’s guidance, Bluegrass Greensource staff trained early childhood educators on the curriculum and provided trainees with the curriculum guide and materials to facilitate lessons. In the past year alone, Rachel worked with 27 preschool classrooms and led six energy labs for caregivers and preschool students across central Kentucky.


“It’s so exciting to facilitate the Junior Energy Explorers classroom visits, teacher curriculum trainings, and family engagement events!” she says. “One of my favorite preschool lessons, focused on wind energy, invites students to problem solve (by moving a feather without touching it), read a story about the wind, then make and test predictions about the distance a cotton ball can travel in the wind from a handheld fan. While focused on a basic everyday phenomenon, students are thinking scientifically, developing language and listening skills, taking turns, following multi-step directions, measuring and counting, manipulating a tool (the fan), using evidence to make a claim that the wind is blowing (or not), and more!

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Rachel firmly believes that early childhood is an ideal time to focus on EE in and out of the classroom. “Young children are so incredibly curious and eager to learn about their world,” she says. “They’re making important discoveries and gains each day. Early childhood education and environmental education go hand-in-hand; both naturally integrate multiple developmental domains, such as science, literacy, math, and even social-emotional learning. It’s important for students to apply skills in each of these domains–and more–to real contexts. Building young students' comfort with and awareness of the natural world at an early age is an important step towards an informed and environmentally literate society. ”



 

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Geomancer Permaculture has been named Kentucky’s Outstanding Business for Excellence in Environmental Education. The award, given by the Kentucky Association for Environmental Education, recognizes individuals, schools, and businesses that exemplify dedication, commitment, and influence in the field of environmental education.


Geomancer, a landscape company based in Lexington, promotes the theory, design, and implementation of permaculture landscaping and green infrastructure with a focus on urban ecology, agroforestry, and watershed restoration.


Leandro "Nachie" Braga says the company “stays invested in environmental education because it's such an intrinsic part of everything we're doing as far as food sovereignty and community empowerment. The challenges we're facing as a society are on such a scale that there really is no other viable strategy besides training as many people as we can in the methodologies of ecological design and, more importantly, getting them actively engaged in decisions about how the world around them is managed.”


Geomancer is dedicated to projects that redefine the relationships between humans and their environment. Some of this work includes:


  • Forest garden design, installation, and maintenance

  • Green infrastructure and regenerative stormwater management

  • Environmental consulting

  • Adaptive urban design

  • Educational programs


A current project Geomancer is particularly excited about is the food forest they’re helping to build with a Lexington neighborhood on unused public land. “It should grow to become the largest such installation in the state,” Nachie said, “and we've already had a lot of fun with Sustainable Agriculture students from the University of Kentucky out there. And it's going to be an amazing educational resource for the community as well.”

Other recent highlights include:

• Presenting at Bluegrass Greensource’s 2022 “GreenFest” event

• Assisting the Cardinal Valley Neighborhood Association in the mulching of wildflower beds along Oxford Circle

• Presenting Lexington Tree Canopy Assessment to the Lexington Tree Board for use in Lexington’s $1.5 million tree canopy improvement discretionary funds. Geomancer’s founder, Nachie Braga, elected co-chair of the city’s Ad Hoc Tree Canopy Improvement Committee tasked with the assessment

• Presenting at the Lexington Fayette Urban County Government’s teacher’s academy at McConnell Springs about partnerships with Fayette County Public Schools and funding sources for environmental education projects

• Developing three partnerships with local schools in the spring semester: Cardinal Valley

Elementary, Beaumont Middle School, and Locust Trace AgriScience Center

• Working with Kentucky Cooperative Extension to film a short video about the Kilrush food forest project as an example of riparian restoration and stewardship

• Beginning Beaumont Middle School Rain and Pollinator Garden. Ground was broken in March 2022 and an education session conducted in April with the Rain Garden Club to help students select plants

• Implementing a free fruit tree program for the Cardinal Valley neighborhood, providing free fruit or nut trees/shrubs to homeowners willing to have the trees planted in their front yards

• Conducting a native tree planting/reforestation event at the Kentucky Castle as part of the 2022 Wild Health Summit

• Forming a new partnership company, Sovereign Habitat LLC, to acquire a home adjacent to Deauville Drive greenway for use as a permaculture project nucleus ecovillage


And that’s just what they’ve been up to since April! For more on Geomancer and all their work, visit patreon.com/geomancerpermaculture.


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You probably know that when you make a gift to KAEE, you’re helping us achieve our vision of a sustainable world where environmental and social responsibility drive individual and institutional choices. But where exactly does your donation go?

  • Donations to KAEE are used to offer professional development workshops and online learning opportunities for formal and nonformal educators so they can lead lessons that are relevant, engaging, and nationally recognized.

  • Gifts help us connect with and prepare teachers to lead EE field trips like the one pictured below, where we worked with Jefferson County Public School to facilitate Project WET activities for 120 middle school students. (Many of them told us it was their first time ever being in a creek, and many of them didn’t want to leave!)

  • Your support allows us to offer discounts, stipends, scholarships, and other financial assistance so that cost is not a barrier for educators to participate in our programs.

  • They also support the day-to-day operations at KAEE, helping our small but mighty team develop and manage programs, workshops, region-wide initiatives, advocacy efforts, essential partnerships, and so much more.

  • Your gift ensures that KAEE can continue to grow and broaden our reach, so that we ensure that access to environmental education and the outdoors is something all Kentuckians receive.

This giving season, we invite you to make a donation so we can continue to do all this and more, together.



 
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