How SAN-IZE Works
SAN IZE, the South Asia Network of International Zoo Educators
Zoo and Outreach Organisation conduct education activities in
South Asia with the help of ZOO’s conservation, education,
thematic and taxon networks
Zoo Outreach Organisation hosts SAN IZE and raises funds for
producing educational materials suitable for students and
others in the South Asian Region. These educational materials
are theme based, largely focused on non-charismatic animals
such as bats, rodents, amphibians, reptiles and vultures as
well as plants but also on a few mega charismatic species as
well.
ZOO & SAN IZE collaborate with the Wildlife Conservation
Society and other conservation and education organizations to
organize training workshops using species or taxon groups for
focusing attention on conservation education and on the use of
active learning techniques. ZOO & SAN IZE also collaborate
with a number of IUCN SSC taxon based specialist groups and,
in fact, host networks which represent specialist groups (such
as Primate Specialist Group, Chiroptera Specialist Group,
etc.) and international species-based organizations (Bat
Conservation International) regionally, e.g. South Asia
(India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and
Afghanistan).
SAN IZE membership is free because that is what works in South
Asia. SAN IZE and ZOO focus on creating interest in the
“right kind” of public education, meaning education that
ultimately brings about change in thinking and behaviour. We
give away material in order to get people to try our methods.
Our methods are to catch the interest of visitors by whatever
means and then to bring about an emotional or intellectual
connect, a “light bulb” or “ah ha” effect.
This method has evolved over two decades of observing what was
being done and not-done in South Asia. What was being done
was for zoos to equate zoo education and public education with
formal education. Most of the signage was biological with lip
service being paid to conservation with slogans, such as “Save
the Tiger”, without any interpretation.
Thus what was not-done was to engage the
visitors and work towards bringing about a change in their
thinking and behaviour. In many zoos also there was little
signage and almost no attractive, interesting signage. There
were two education officers in two of the then nearly 400
zoos in the region when ZOO was founded, and no education
departments. Education was considered a major role of zoos at
a policy level but it was thought that simply providing
animals for people to see was sufficient.
Zoos in India celebrate Wildlife Week every October and allow
the public free. Often they conduct a function for this
because it is an opportunity to invite a senior Minister or
administrator to the zoo. The functions consists of
formalities and a speech definitely not designed for educating
kids. Schools are invited, kids sit for a couple of hours,
listening to speeches they don’t understand. Tea sometimes is
served; politicians might pose with some kids, and that was
“education” for the year. Our goal was to replace this
with something meaningful.
Combining resources
When ZOO
first tackled this situation it was quickly learned that no
education officer and no education department usually meant no
budget for education as such, also. Certainly no budget to
engage artists, writers and educators to create material. We
then looked at what they did have a budget for. They had
funds they could use to pay postage. They also had a
hospitality budget which meant they could give tea and snacks
and sometimes lunch to groups if there was a zoo-attached
programme. They also had a budget for photography.
So we evolved a method in which we raise funds to develop
educational material at our office, quite often based on the
regional conservation workshops ZOO conducts with the
Conservation Breeding Specialist Groups and certain taxon
based specialist groups, but also in response to problems the
zoo needs to solve, such as bad behaviour of visitors
(teasing, feeding, etc.) and welfare issues. These funds come
from western zoos such as Chester, Appenheul, Columbus,
conservation organizations, such as Bat Conservation
International, Margot Marsh Biodiversity Fund, governments
such as US Fish and Wildlife Service, and animal welfare
organizations, such as UFAW in England
We then make an informal contract with organizations which
want to conduct public education – zoos, conservation
organizations, animal welfare organizations – that we will
give them free material and guidelines for conducting a
programme if they will 1. plan a programme and submit a
proposal describing it; 2. follow our guidelines; 3. pay
postage; take photos and provide some to us; call the press
and credit our sponsors in the programme; and make a report
including press clippings and photos. Many zoos and other
organizations find this “contract” do-able and to their
advantage. Many of them had never conducted a real teaching
programme before and the experience was so rewarding, it got
them interested in our kind of conservation education for the
public.
So every year, several times a year during “special days or
weeks” themed on wildlife, animal welfare, environment, etc.
we invite persons from over 200 organisations to apply for a
quantity of these educational packets, posters, t-shirts, and
guidelines free of cost … but not free of obligation.
Most of the individuals and organizations which order
materials join SAN IZE. They can apply for and receive our
popular educational materials throughout the year even
to conduct their day to day programmes if they can justify it
with an application. We supply thousands of packets and other
material to hundreds of our education partners. This is also
helpful to us in our conservation work as we educate far more
people than we could ever reach as a single organisation.
After the programme is over, the organisers report us how they
conducted their programme, for whom, what they have achieved
out of their programme. On seeing their report, we can get an
idea of how effectively they are carrying out programmes and
can give a helping hand by visiting them or by inviting their
staff responsible for education to one of our educator
training workshops.
Quantum
Leap in Sophistication
The Wildlife Conservation Society WCS Division of
International Education asked Zoo Outreach Organisation to
help them introduce a new education module into India which
was called Teachers for Tigers, a manual and a methodology.
We agreed to collaborate and organized a series of workshops.
These workshops were so effective and the techniques so much
what was required that we continued to organize training with
WCS aided by grants from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Tiger
and Rhino Conservation Fund and Great Ape Conservation Fund.
Since February 2003 ZOO and WCS have conducted 11 training
workshops intended to train trainers. In every series there
have been teacher training as such and also zoo educator
training workshops, 8 in India and 3 in Bangladesh with a
total of 345 participants, 248 from India and 97 from
Bangladesh had attended these workshops. They were mostly
teachers, NGO’s, zoo and forest personnel. The objective of
the workshop was to provide training for schoolteachers,
non-formal educators such as NGO educators and zoo educators,
in innovative teaching techniques using tiger as a theme.
As a follow up of these workshops evaluation and refresher
courses were conducted. For the evaluation, Wildlife
Conservation Society and Zoo Outreach Organisation developed a
questionnaire and the evaluation carried out in almost all the
places the workshops was held. The questionnaire was developed
in a way to find out from the participants how effectively
they are using the teaching techniques with their audience.
The evaluation process started in August 2004 and continued up
to March 2006. The participants were met by in person and
asked them to fill up the questionnaire on the spot. The
results were analyzed and summarized. From the results we
understand that most of the participants used the training to
a variety of target groups, spreading out the conservation
message, adopted few techniques to some other
animals/subjects, extensively used the manual at their work
place, taught teaching technique to their colleagues, and
friends, conducted educational programmes with more games and
activities etc.,
Based on the evaluation results, three “Teachers for Tigers”
refresher courses were conducted in two places in India and
one in Bangladesh. In these refresher courses, as per their
wish, more activities and games from the Habitat Ecology
Learning Program (H.E.L.P) manual (which was also developed by
WCS, were taught. We taught them also how “Teachers for
Tigers” manual could be adapted for other animals; how to link
the school curricula with the manual, how to plan, develop and
execute educational programmes with different audiences. Many
of our participants now have conducted their own workshops.
Some have gone for an internship and training in New York at
WCS.
Recently an advanced workshop was conducted with some of our
more creative participants from throughout South Asia who were
given a pre-workshop assignment of revising a chapter of the
Habitat Ecology Learning Program (H.E.L.P) manual for use in
the South Asian region. They were to come up with examples to
illustrate the manual and also point out where the text was
more oriented towards Africa than Asia so that could be
corrected. They also evaluated ZOO’s education packets and
gave suggestions for improvements.
In addition, a special project of our Education Officer has
been to develop a “Kurriculum Key” using our state textbooks
(this is Tamil Nadu state in India) to demonstrate how
teachers can link the school curricula with “Teachers for
Tigers” manual. This was introduced also at the refresher
courses so that participants from other language states and
countries could link their own curricula with “Teachers for
Tigers” manual.
Working
with scientists
We have a particular interest in wildlife biologists who do
field work in rural areas as potential educators. There is a
project in India called “Every Child a Scientist” which
teaches science to tribal kids. We have an informal project
called “Every Scientist a Teacher” in which we pull field
biologists and other researchers into teacher training courses
and a teacher training module even into their field techniques
training courses, which are also organized by us through the
taxon networks we host. This is a wonderful marriage because
kids love to be taught by “real scientists” who often can also
supply wonderful props like dead bats, bones, and other
artifacts, and “real field biologists can tell interesting
stories about the animals in the wild. Field biologists in
particular have a wonderful opportunity to educate rural,
local and forest communities. With this in mind, we have
focused a lot of attention on primate researchers, setting up
a special module for primates in a Teachers for Tigers course
following a Population and Habitat Viability Assessment for
Hoolock Gibbon, a highly threatened primate in Bangladesh and
India. Our collaborators were the Wildlife Trust of
Bangladesh, a very effective conservation group of researchers
working out of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Recently, these researchers of Wildlife Trust of Bangladesh
conducted a Hoolock Gibbon special conservation workshop with
the staff of the Dhaka Zoo in Bangladesh. It was their first
such educational activity with a city target group.
Thirty-three kids with parents attended World Environment Day
activities at the Dhaka Zoo and were taken through activities
from Teachers for Tigers Manual but adapted for Hoolock Gibbon
by WTB “researcher combo educators”. The WTB researchers were
so thrilled by their success that they are confident now in
education and plan to make it a very large part of their
organisation’s mandate and activity. The Director of WTB,
Anwar Islam, was invited to one of the first Teachers for
Tigers workshops held in Tamil Nadu Project Tiger Areas in
2003. In the interim we kept in touch with WTB, sending them
material and advice. In January 2005 we took Teachers for
Tigers to Bangladesh with WTB as collaborators and in 2006
conducted a very successful refresher course at the zoo with
WTB providing coordination. Dr. Islam told us once that he
had wondered why in the world we invited him to a teacher
training course when he is a university professor and wildlife
researcher. NOW he know why.
We have herein described Zoo Outreach Organization’s routine
education activity for the past 20 years (almost the age of
our 25+ years old organization) but our reach, quality and
impact has increased exponentially. Every year we come in
contact with more expert and conservation-minded persons who
help us become more effective in education. Every year we get
more requests for material and training than previous years
and our education activities are continuing to promote
biodiversity conservation awareness in this region.
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