“Is the ocean under the sandpit?”
The question came during a World Ocean Day activity at a regional early childhood service. The children had been making jellyfish from recycled materials and singing songs about coral reefs. But when that question surfaced—from a child who had never seen the sea—it gave the educator pause.
They realised something essential:
In trying to teach sustainability, they had accidentally taught that nature lives somewhere else.
Far away. Out there. In books and posters and problems too big for little hands to touch.
In early childhood education and care, sustainability is not just a principle to tick off. It’s a living, breathing part of our curriculum. But for many young children, sustainability can feel abstract—like something that happens somewhere else, or something meant for grown-ups.
That’s where place-connected lea...
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