Pedagogy of Environmental Studies • Topic 1 of 4

Concept & Scope of EVS

Environmental Studies (EVS) at the primary stage is not a smaller version of science -- it is a distinct, integrated subject that helps a child make sense of the immediate physical, social and natural world around them. Its scope draws together three streams: the natural sciences (plants, animals, water, the human body), the social sciences (family, work, neighbourhood, travel, festivals) and environmental concerns (conservation, pollution, care for living things). The aim is not to load young children with information but to nurture curiosity, observation, sensitivity and the ability to relate learning to real life. A useful distinction CTET tests: environmental studies is the school subject taught in Classes 3 to 5, whereas environmental education is the broader, lifelong process of building awareness, attitudes and responsible behaviour towards the environment across all stages and even outside school. Significantly, EVS as a separate subject begins only in Class 3; in Classes 1 and 2 environmental concepts are integrated into language and mathematics, because very young children learn best through stories, rhymes, play and direct observation rather than through a formal subject.

✅ Solved examples

1. In which classes is EVS taught as a separate, integrated subject according to the NCF 2005?
Classes 3 to 5 (the upper primary primary stage). In Classes 1 and 2 there is no separate EVS; environmental learning is integrated into language and mathematics.
2. EVS at the primary level integrates which broad areas of knowledge?
Science (natural environment), social science (social environment) and environmental education / concerns -- combined into a single subject rather than taught as separate disciplines.
3. What is the difference between environmental studies and environmental education?
Environmental studies is the specific school subject for Classes 3 to 5; environmental education is the broader, lifelong process of developing awareness, values and responsible behaviour towards the environment at every stage.
4. The primary aim of teaching EVS to young children is best described as:
To develop curiosity, observation and sensitivity towards the immediate natural and social environment and connect learning to real life -- not to transmit a large body of factual information.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. EVS as a distinct subject is introduced from which class?
Not from Class 1.
Classes 1-2 integrate it into language and maths.
Class 3
2. In Classes 1 and 2, environmental concepts are mainly developed through:
No separate EVS textbook here.
Stories, rhymes, play and observation.
Integration into language and mathematics
3. The school subject EVS combines science with which other discipline at the primary level?
It is a bridge subject.
Family, neighbourhood, work.
Social science (social studies)
4. Building lifelong awareness, attitudes and responsible behaviour towards nature, beyond just the school subject, is called:
Broader than the Class 3-5 subject.
Lifelong, across all stages.
Environmental education

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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