The volunteer Task Force for the Annual New Mexico's Week for the Animals is requesting your help now.
* Education Links 

* Ideas for your School
or youth group
 

* Sample Lesson 1 

* Sample Lesson 2 

NEWService Award Recipients 2004

Service Award Recipients 2002 

Service Award Recipients 2001 

Service Award Categories 

Nomination Instructions & Guidelines 

Online submission form

Printable Form 

Service Award Recipients 2000 

News Headlines 

About the Week 

Announcements 

The Meeting Room

Humane Education 

Spay Neuter Clinics 

Message to Veterinarians 

Links 

Contact

HOME 

We recognize the importance of protecting the privacy of personally identifiable information of our users.


In 1933, the PTA addressed congress and stated the following.
"Humane education is the teaching of justice, goodwill and humanity toward all life."  



Teachers & Students please contact us for help in bringing HUMANE EDUCATION to your school or class room !

Why Humane Education?

 

  • By the time they are teenagers, children in the U.S. have witnessed tens of thousands of murders and acts of violence on television.

  • For too many people, young and old alike, greed and consumerism have replaced kindness and community concern as the prominent values of modern society.

  • More than half of the wells in the U.S. are contaminated; forests and wetlands are being destroyed rapidly, and species are becoming extinct at record rates.

  • Institutionalized animal abuse in a number of industries is not only causing profound suffering to animals, but is also contributing to a host of environmental and health problems.

  • Hate groups in the U.S. are gaining members at an increasing and alarming rate, and hate crimes are on the rise.

These are just a few of the indicators that we need effective solutions for future generations, and innovative approaches to critical social and environmental problems.

Humane Education as a Solution

While many people are concerned about the issues and problems above, most groups working on social change focus their attention on a single issue, such as the environment, or animals, or children, or the disabled, etc. While this approach is effective in terms of lobbying and challenging specific problems, it fails to address the beliefs and systems which initially created the problems. In order to address these issues at their core, and challenge the belief systems which perpetuate suffering and injustice. We must focus on underlying principles, practical solutions, and the interconnection of social change issues.

The approach is broad-based humane education which helps people of all ages to explore their deepest values and philosophies of life, while at the same time discussing the effects of daily choices, from what toothpaste to use, to what food to eat, to what kind of home to build.

  • Humane education asks people to consider how we should treat everyone: friends, neighbors, children, the elderly, the disenfranchised, native peoples, forests, rivers, animals: in essence -- all to whom we are connected in the web of life.

  • Humane education does not confine itself to a single issue, or a few issues, but rather seeks solutions to a whole range of social ills through presentations which allow people to define their values and learn to live by them.

  • Humane education attempts to challenge the discouraging and frightening trends of violence, dispassion, apathy, greed, and the inability to think critically by actively promoting compassion, critical thinking, and respect for self and others through exciting, innovative, enjoyable and transforming activities and teaching strategies.

Unfortunately, education which encourages students to question and determine their values and beliefs, which promotes compassion toward both human and non human animals, and which helps young people to think critically about the information around them, is rare.

Humane Education Classes. Aesop wrote, "no act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted". Thousands of children throughout New Mexico will learn about compassion for animals in these special in-school humane education presentations. Teachers & Students please contact us for help in bringing HUMANE EDUCATION to your school or class room !

Seminars for Teachers and Youth Leaders. These seminars will give educators and young adults who want to develop humane education programs in their communities a strong foundation to build on.


Click Here to Post or View.
Google
Search WWW
Search www.animalweek.org



© 2000-2005 New Mexico Week for the Animals, Developed by: Lloyd Thrap for BlueCat Productions.

Last updated 1/23/2005


Questions or comments about this site contact the Webmaster