Introducing the Built Environment to Students
Surprisingly, though it affects all of us, the "built environment" is an understudied topic in Canadian classrooms. When addressed, it is usually presented in Art or Art History, occasionally Social Studies and, infrequently, Math, usually in relation to geometry.
The built environment, however, shapes us now, in our daily lives, and will certainly have a profound impact on us in the future. For example, are the public buildings and institutions that we have created in our city truly accessible to the disabled? For the elderly? For children? How do we design better buildings and why have certain architectural styles been adopted into our conventions of design? Can we have beauty and accessibility?
How are architectural styles translated between cultures: for example, the arches of Islamic Africa and Spain appearing the Gothic cathedrals of Europe? How are these similarities explained in cultures that appear to have no ties of communication, such as the pyramid builders of Egypt and Meso-America? And why do these forms reappear in our modern
design--consider
Edmonton's City Hall.
The Heritage Community Foundation encourages projects that explore these issues, especially in relationship to the architectural heritage of Alberta (which certainly has impressive ancestors if we count the Egyptian or Meso-American pyramids as an antecedent to the design). We have funded a built environment and heritage project at Strathcona Composite High School that documented, through photographs, the environment at the
Rossdale Power Plant, the closure of
Eatons, the demolishing of a neighbourhood grocery and the final days of some of the
grain elevators in Alberta.
Though these projects were larger in scope than most teachers would try to integrate into their lessons, the
Foundation has developed a brief list of
resources--mostly from the United States--to introduce some of these concepts to their students. The
Foundation, and its partners, hopes to develop curriculum materials and resources to support this
endeavour, with a Canadian and Albertan outlook, and encourages interested teachers to explore the possibility of adding the built environment to their lessons.
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Resources
Careers
Alberta Association of Architects: Career Information
Alberta Occupational Profiles
Human Resources Development Canada: Job Futures 2000
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Class Plans
American Architectural Foundation: Learning by Design
Introduction: Educating Children Through
Architecture
The National (US) Parks program: Teaching With Historic Places
Royal Australian Institute of Architects: Built Environment Education
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Organizations
Partners for Livable Communities
Sustainable Communities Network
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Reference
Architecture Through the Ages
Art: Teaching Resources, prepared by ERIC/CHESS
Cities/Buildings Database
Unfortunately, this database includes no Canadian images.
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