Stephen P. Broker
This curriculum unit on contemporary human-environment relations focuses on the interplay of cultural, ecological, environmental, and human health issues. It is a case study of an environmental disaster near Donana National Park, Andalucia, Spain. Donana is considered the most important wetland in Europe. Its marshes, mobile dunes, and forests are unique. In April 1998, a sudden burst in a zinc mine waste reservoir released a billion gallons of heavy metal contaminants into the Guadiamar River, a tributary of the Guadalquivir River, which forms the eastern boundary of Donana National Park. The toxic spill quickly was regarded as a national disaster in Spain, and it received extensive coverage in the press and in science journals. The highly acidic sludge, zinc, cadmium, arsenic, and lead pollutants that were released into the environment continue to threaten the ecology and the biota of this internationally significant wetland.
I had the opportunity to visit Spain in the summer of 1998, just several months after the toxic spill occurred. The trip started and ended in Madrid, but the majority of time was spent traveling through the southern and southwestern regions of Spain, in Andalucia and Extremadura. A day excursion to Donana National Park gave me a chance to make first hand observations of the wetland (albeit during the dry season), to discuss ecological and environmental issues with park and tour group representatives, and to obtain some highly informative literature on the region. Having a highly current environmental problem of international importance and some direct experience with the setting for the problem, I quickly developed a desire to collect additional information and develop a curriculum unit in environmental science.
The unit is intended for high school juniors and seniors in a year-long environmental science elective, and for juniors and seniors in an honors anatomy and physiology elective. For the environmental science students, I intend the unit to raise topics relating to groundwater contamination, the threatened loss of biological diversity, land management, and risks to human health. For the anatomy and physiology students, the unit will introduce subjects that lead to further study of environmental/human health problems. My primary purpose in developing the unit, however, is to show all my students how they might undertake a broad-based investigation into a contemporary environmental issue.
The classroom activities which are presented in the unit follow from the development of an historical narrative about Coto Donana, the name for this long time nature preserve, and they include cultural, ecological, environmental, and land management components. Students' research skills are developed in an attempt to develop an understanding of a complex set of issues. The unit considers the geography of Spain, the historical and cultural heritage of Andalucia Province, the biogeographical province in which Donana is found, and the legal protections that are afforded Donana by national governance and international designation. It is my hope that the case study presented here will lead to the development of similar teaching units focusing on regional environmental problems (such as groundwater contamination at Massachusetts Military Reservation/Otis Air Force Base, Cape Cod, Massachusetts), and local environmental problems (such as pollution of the Quinnipiac River marshes of Greater New Haven, Connecticut). Future refinement of the unit also will lead to further exploration of the following related topics: (1) people's attitudes toward nature and wildlife; (2) the broad range of interests that different individuals, groups, organizations, and political groups maintain concerning the environment; (3) the management implications of people's attitudes toward and values assigned to nature; (4) the interrelations among sustainable resource development, human health, and ecosystem management; (5) the ethical issues which arise from human actions that cause damage to human health and diminished environmental health; (6) the development of mapping skills, using a variety of maps and photographs to track the distributions of natural resources, human population, and health impacts. Several of these topics have been central to the Teachers Institute seminar that has given rise to this unit.
The unit has been developed in the 1999Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute, where I have been a fellow in the seminar, "Human-Environment Relations: International Perspectives from History, Science, Politics, and Ethics," led by John P. Wargo, Associate Professor of Environmental Risk Analysis and Policy. This seminar has engaged its participants in challenging discussions about the effects of human actions on the environment and human health. The several purposes of the seminar include identification of environmental issues of importance, disciplinary and interdisciplinary analyses, interrelations among ecosystem management, human health, and sustainable resource development, values and ideology, and questions of ethics. In the seminar, Institute fellows have looked at the following topics in human-environment relations: population growth; agriculture; land use and infectious disease; ecosystem management; watershed management; land use and environmental health; biodiversity loss; ecosystem fragmentation and landscape planning; wildlands, parks, and protected areas. (A more comprehensive treatment of seminar purposes and topics is available in the seminar description.)
I have become a strong believer in the use of current event topics in the teaching of science. Television is without a doubt the medium of choice for young people. At times in my teaching, I make use of some of the excellent life science (natural history, ecological, medical) and physical science programs that appear on television. However, my medium of choice for launching into current events is the newspaper. I tend to use articles from the New York Times. The NYT recently has expanded its Tuesday Science Times section, and an increasing number of Section A articles appear through the week. These are useful, accessible articles that can be incorporated into the science curriculum. I have found three New York Times articles on Donana National Park which have appeared in the last two years. I use them in a non-chronological order to frame sections of this unit. They are an April 1998 announcement of the zinc mine toxic spill near Donana National Park, a 1997 travel article encouraging a visit to Donana, and a 1999 article updating the public on the effects of the toxic spill.