Biodiversity
Education
April 20 – May 17, 2026
Join the Cornell Civic Ecology Lab for a 4-week global online course to turn biodiversity concern into meaningful education, collaboration, and practical local action.
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Duration: 4-week online course (Apr 20 – May 17).
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Focus: Research-informed biodiversity education linked to action.
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Certificate: Cornell University certificate (PDF), documenting 25 professional development hours.
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Audience: Educators and teachers, sustainability leaders in organizations and communities, volunteers and biodiversity advocates worldwide.
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Instruction: The course is asynchronous, new materials released weekly. Optional live meetings will be recorded.
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Final project: Create a practical biodiversity education or stewardship activity plan for your settings.
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Syllabus: PDF file.
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Standard tuition: $90 (see more below).


Why take this course?
Biodiversity loss can feel overwhelming. At the same time, educators, organizations, students, and communities can understand, care for, restore, and advocate for the living systems around them. Biodiversity education can help people move beyond awareness toward stewardship, participation, and action. This course is designed for people who want to teach biodiversity in ways that are engaging, locally relevant, and connected to real-world efforts such as habitat restoration, community science, pollinator support, soil renewal, watershed protection, and place-based stewardship.
This course helps you:
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Connect biodiversity concepts to teaching, facilitation, communication, and action.
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Explore how to engage learners, colleagues, and communities.
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Develop a project you can adapt to your own school, organization, campus, or local initiative.
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Learn from Cornell Civic Ecology Lab instructors, invited speakers, and other participants.
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Join a guided learning community that offers feedback, discussion, and momentum.
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Earn a Cornell-affiliated credential that documents your work and professional learning.


What you will do
By the end of the course, you should have clearer ideas, stronger language, concrete examples, and a project that helps you move from intention to biodiversity action in your own classroom, program, organization, campus, or community. During this course, you will:
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Learn from readings, examples, and discussions about biodiversity education and action.
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Examine how biodiversity connects to place, stewardship, ecological systems, community well-being, and public engagement,
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Reflect on biodiversity challenges and opportunities in your own setting.
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Participate in live webinars, roundtables, and case study meetings.
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Discuss ideas with peers from different sectors and countries.
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Share early plans, questions, or drafts for feedback.
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Create a biodiversity education and/or stewardship activity plan.
Possible course projects
By the end of the course, you will design a 2-page plan for a biodiversity education/stewardship action. Your project can be small or large, formal or informal, based on classrooms, organizations, or communities. Biodiversity education and stewardship projects can take many forms, such as:
Schoolyard habitat restoration
Design a learning experience around native planting, insect habitat, bird habitat, or small-scale restoration in school or community spaces.
Local species lesson sequence
Create lessons or activities that help learners observe, identify, and care about species in their own neighborhood, campus, park, or watershed.
Community bioblitz or biodiversity monitoring
Organize a community science effort that invites learners or residents to document local biodiversity and reflect on what those observations reveal.
Pollinator support initiative
Connect biodiversity education with action through pollinator gardens, native plantings, or public outreach about insects and habitat.
Youth stewardship and storytelling
Involve youth in documenting local biodiversity, interview community members, share stories of place, or communicate conservation concerns.
Soil restoration and compost education
Build programming around soil organisms, decomposition, composting, regenerative practices, and the role of healthy soils in biodiversity
Wetland or coastal biodiversity education
Help learners understand how streams, shorelines, wetlands, or marine environments support biodiversity and how people can contribute to protection.
Ecosystem connectivity mapping
Guide participants or students to explore fragmentation, habitat corridors, and the movement of species across campuses, cities, or landscapes.
Urban greening and community biodiversity

