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“THE ORIGIN OF LIFE”

by Contributor

(Nov. 25, 2019) — We all have a strong connection with Mother Nature. The question is, why should we teach our children about nature, especially how to save it? For some, getting kids connected to nature helps boost their brain development. Some experts also opine that there is a strong correlation between Mother Nature and the development of the human body. You may want to refer to religious teachings to further liken nature to spiritual nourishment and that’s okay.

Take, for example, those who go on Yoga retreats every year. Why do they always do it? Also, why is it that some places present a more tranquil experience with nature than others? The truth is that nature holds lots of secrets to happiness, peace, and love, most of which we can only discern by interacting with it. There are lots of good things about which kids can write about nature, especially with the help of bestessaytips.com. When we teach our kids to save nature, we are introducing them to a process of harnessing positive energies that exist freely in the universe.

Importance of teaching children to save nature

Now, let’s dig deeper and find out why teaching children about nature is important.

·        Relief from technology-infiltrated environment

Well, if you ever imagined a world where everywhere you look there is a concrete wall, then you understand how technology is making it difficult to learn about nature, save or even appreciate it.  Ask this question: How do SEM subjects contribute to environmental conservation? Well, nature is a vital relief from a world that continues to be flooded with technological gadgets.

Spending 8 hours every day learning via computers, using interactive whiteboards and other gamified learning experiences, takes concentration from the environment. If such a trend continues, we risk losing a whole generation to technology. It would be a generation that will not appreciate the need to live and work in a healthy environment.

·        Proponents of environment conservation

As things stand now, the world is at risk of losing its forest cover, thanks to climate change. You could also say global warming is putting every animal and plant species at risk of extinction. That is a path we should not tread, hence the more reason parents and educators should teach kids to save Mother Earth.

·        Nature is life if you understand how it works

Unless you learn how nature works, you wouldn’t understand the origin of life. In a nutshell, nature is life. It is the beginning of life, in all its forms. From nature, life comes and to it, life goes. Think about this in the context of the air we breathe.

Plants give out oxygen, which is the most vital component of air to human life. In the same way, water is a rich source of nature’s most vital secrets to life.  When you consider all the above, you begin to appreciate the need to educate kids about nature, and most importantly, how to save Mother Earth.

·        Nature is a vital stress-reliever

There is a very big difference between taking a walk down a busy street and doing so deep in the woods. The latter is outright stress-relieving. In some hospitals, there are designated beautiful gardens where patients can relax because they aid faster healing. We often say interacting with nature is therapeutic. These are things kids need to learn even as we teach them to protect and save nature from doom.

Final Words

Discussions about nature are often emotive. Thus, when teaching children about environmental conservation, we realize climate change is becoming a real threat to life every day. The more kids learn about nature, the more they will appreciate it and actively become engaged in debates about climate change.

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Chief New Leaaf
Monday, November 25, 2019 8:52 AM

One can state, with a very high degree of certainty, that in every county or parish in our country, there is a road that has been laid upon a path of egress or migration of a species other than our own.

Depending upon the time of year, different species travel from point ‘A’ to point ‘B’, but the same specie travel the same path year after year, perhaps for thousands of years.

There our roads where turtles cross the same place twice a year, but the powers that be don’t have the brains or the will to divert traffic for that period, or construct a tunnel or a bridge for the turtles, or for any other critter, for that matter.

We would rather crush millions of caterpillars, frogs, turtles and thousands of other living things that we share our planet with rather than to be inconvenienced.

It is a shame, especially how we destroy the wetlands and clear cut for from a single home or a large development.

I have spoken.

Chief New Leaf