Arne Naess calls our connection to the earth and the natural world ecological identity. How people relate to nature is an important aspect of cultural identity as well. The range of experience defines differences not only among individuals but among nations. Why take ESL outdoors? Personal relationships with nature enhance the student experience, increase international understanding, provide talking points for cultural differences, and may even lead to more environmentally responsible behavior by us all.
The suggested readings vary in difficulty. Flesch Reading Ease scores range from 30 to 70. Flesh-Kincaid, Gunning-Fog, and SMOG reading levels average out to grades 9-13. The reading selections are short, ranging from one page to one chapter. While the materials have been tailored for students on our Colorado campus, the format could be adapted for other parts of the country.
Abbey, Edward. "Lake Havasu." The Best of Edward Abbey. Sierra Club paperback library. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988. Pages 54-64.
Edward Abbey was on his way to Los Angeles when he discovered Lake Havasu near the Grand Canyon. Fifteen years later, he had still not made it to Los Angeles. Discover with Abbey the charm of canyon country.
Anderson, Lorraine, editor. Sisters of the Earth: Women's Prose and Poetry About Nature. New York: Vintage Books, 2003.
Sisters is a wonderful anthology of poems, short stories, and essays. Any or all of these selections are recommended for ESL outdoors.
Baca, Jimmy S. Winter Poems Along the Rio Grande. New York: New Directions Pub, 2004. Print. Page 40.
"The river never taught me to assume, but to watch, listen, honor the path it travels..." Poet Jimmy Santiago Baca celebrates nature, creativity, love, and spirit on the banks of the Rio Grande.
Barr, Nevada. Blood Lure. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2001. Pages 288-292.
The novel opens on Ranger Anna Pigeon whipping up a delightfully disgusting batch of bear bait. Anna has come to Glacier National Peace Park on the border of Canada to study grizzlies and finds herself in the midst of a series of bear attacks that leave her struggling to re-evaluate her own view of nature. In this excerpt Anna meets a grizzly and experiences the power of nature at first hand.
Bass, Rick. "The Canoeists." The Lives of Rocks: Stories. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co, 2006. Pages 62-66.
The Canoeists is a story of lyric simplicity. A day on the river teaches that the best things in life are free.
Hobbs, Will. Downriver. New York: Atheneum, 1991. Pages 11-23.
In this excerpt, a group of rash young climbers confront nature and their own fears during an electrical storm on infamous Storm King Mountain.
Hillerman, Tony. Coyote Waits. New York: Harper & Row, 1990. Pages 1-9.
A character in its own right, the great Navajo Reservation, the Rez as it is known, is the heart and soul of Tony Hillerman's novels. Larger than some states and many foreign countries, the Rez is a harshly beautiful landscape where humans have learned to tread lightly.
Johnson, Kirk R., and Ray Troll. Cruisin' the Fossil Freeway: An Epoch Tale of a Scientist and an Artist on the Ultimate 5,000-Mile Paleo Road Trip. Golden, Colo: Fulcrum Pub, 2007. Page 63.
The wonderful, whimsical art of Ray Troll aids comprehension for non-native readers. Kirk Johnson's clear, entertaining prose makes science accessible to all. The road trip diary blends slices of modern American life with prehistoric geology, giving international students a truly unique view of America. The very short selection on page 63 teaches amateur fossil hunters how to find roadside dinosaur tracks.
"Women Are Venturesome Creatures!" Ketchum, Liza. Into a New Country: Eight Remarkable Women of the West. Boston: Little, Brown, 2000.Pages 8-24.
Susan Shelby Magoffin was one of the first white women to travel the Santa Fe Trail. In 1846 the newly-wed, pregnant Susan left St. Louis for the western frontier. The diary Susan left us gives modern readers an invaluable portrait of a woman's life in the wilderness.
Kunkel, Benjamin. "Colorado." Weiland, Matt, and Sean Wilsey, editors. State by State: A Panoramic Portrait of America. New York, NY: Ecco, 2008. Pages 57-65.
Ben Kunkel shares a life-long love affair with the Centennial State without romanticizing the contrasting and contradictory aspects of life beyond the urban corridor. The Religious Right, Wiccans, Buddhists, gunslingers, missionaries, Mormons, hippies, nativists, immigrants and the KKK populate this essay that provides international students with a modern history of the state circa 1950 to the present.
Lee, Katie. "Sandstone Seduction". Anderson, Lorraine, editor. Sisters of the Earth: Women's Prose and Poetry About Nature. New York: Vintage Books, 2003.Pages 62-65.
Katie Lee fell in love with Glen Canyon on the Colorado River in 1954, a decade before the canyon was drowned by the waters of Lake Powell. Come share her memories of that vanished time and place.
Pynn, Larry. "Winter of the Devil Bear." Last Stands: A Journey Through North America's Vanishing Ancient Rainforests. Corvallis, Or: Oregon State University Press, 2000. Pages 43-55.
Terrible Ted was a wolverine with an attitude. With great difficulty researchers fitted the cantankerous beast with a radio collar. Relieved to see Ted's furry backside disappearing into the forest, little did the experts know they would soon meet Ted again and that he would become a legend of the wilderness.
Ragsdale, John G. Camper's Guide to Outdoor Cooking: Everything from Fires to Fixin's. Houston: Gulf, 1998. Pages 47-53.
The illustrated chapter on trail cooking provides the new outdoors-person with directions for making cheap and inventive cook stoves and utensils from a surprising array of common, recycled, and found objects.
Stafford,Melanie. "Spring at Gem Lake." Kailey, Matt. Focus on the Fabulous: Colorado GLBT Voices. Boulder, Colo: Johnson Books, 2007. Pages 71-72.
Melanie Stafford has been writing poetry since she could hold a pen. Gem Lake distills the essence of the Rocky Mountains into a single page.
Vowell, Sarah. "The Strenuous Life." The Partly Cloudy Patriot. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003. Pages 181-196.
The Partly Cloudy Patriot is an insightful and funny collection of personal stories based on the author's travels through America and across the bumpy roads of her own life. "The Strenuous Life" is a portrait of life in the Dakotas.
For discussion guides and materials see http://guides.auraria.edu/wild