Homeschool Facts

My Perspectives From A Homeschool Parent

A Field Of Study That Brings People Into Contact With Nature

Aug 27th, 2008 • Category: Homeschool
by Steve Collins

The field of Conservation involves a wide range of food needs, crop management and soil. Students interested in earning degrees in Conservation and Ecology must recognize such particular fields as water conservation, forests, wildlife extinction, wildlife management, pesticides, waste management and more. Useful courses should include in-depth ecological case studies that challenge potential students to study how ecological concepts apply in the field.

Vocations in Conservation and Ecology often engage spending a good deal of time in the wild. Observing and protecting the purity of nature reserves and wildlife refuges and endangered wetlands could well be part of a potential student’s career. Some graduates may even work in the corporate world, working to acquire the funds and the awareness of various environmental organizations.

A wide range of careers that manage, conserve and protect natural resources contain such employment opportunities as park ranger assistant, visitor center specialist, biologist wildlife assistant, wildlife handler, nature park specialist, conservation educator, marine life aquarium worker, forestry technician, horticulture aide, environmental lobbyist, grass roots organizer, adventure tour guide, zoological society specialist, museum specialist, and more. The forests and parks of the United States are lush resources, providing tremendous beauty and incredible peace. A key element of conservation is the successful managing of the resources contained in the forests and harvested woodlands. Graduates of the Conservation and Ecology curriculum are trusted to develop, maintain, and protect the forests of the nation. The logging industry cultivates thousands of acres of forests each year, supplying the apparently insatiable hunger for paper, and it is the conservationist who must safeguard the rest of the forests.

Those who may be employed by state and local governments, or who may be contracted by such municipalities to clear away underbrush and garbage from park trails, roadsides, and designated camping areas. Some conservation specialists and ecologists may be contracted to preserve various facilities and campgrounds. Other forest and conservation workers work in forest nurseries, sorting out tree seedlings and discarding those that don’t meet the standards of root formation, stem development, and condition of foliage.

A few conservation and ecology students may find employment on tree farms, where they plant, cultivate, and harvest various kinds of foliage. The duties of students vary with these types of farms. Those who work on specialty farms, such as farms growing Christmas or ornamental trees for nurseries, are accountable for shearing treetops and limbs to shape the growth of the trees under their care, to increase the density of branches, and to recover the shape and health of the trees.

No doubt, this is a field of study that brings a diverse number of prospective students into contact with Nature and the pleasures of the great outdoors.

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