Welcome to the Environment Reporting Education Resource

Meet Zoe, our State of the Environment reporting (SoE) friend.
Zoe will take you on a journey through the education resource for
the State of the Environment Report for South Australia 2003. The
types of information provided include:
- Fact sheets; lots of up-to-date information about South
Australia's environment.
- Case studies; find out about environmental projects at
other schools.
- Research ideas; explore the environment by asking some
important questions.
- Community and internet resources; find out what other
information is available to learn more about our environment.
- SACSA Framework tools; an environmental reporting guide
for educators.
- Tools for planning and delivering actions for the environment.
You can use the education resource to find out what is happening
to the South Australian environment, learn about the kinds of environmental
care projects you can participate in and even how to develop your
own environmental action project. If you want more information about
the state of our environment you can find it at the environment
reporting site.
The full State of the Environment Report for South Australia 2003
is available here,
including access to comprehensive monitoring and evaluation information
about South Australia's environment.
What is State of Environment Reporting (SoE)?
State of Environment reporting is a process that has been in place
around the world for 10 years. Reporting about the environment shows
what is happening in the environment and provides information to
government, industry, non-government organisations and all sections
of the community. The reports help to:
- raise public awareness about environmental issues
- educate about the impacts of human lifestyle on the environment
- provide information about developing policy for the environment
- assess the performance of environmental policy and programs
- establish scientific information about the state of our environment.
Australia's first SoE report was published in 1988 with the second
in 2001. In South Australia, the Environment Protection Authority
(EPA) is required to produce an SoE Report at least once every 5
years. The Environment Minister then presents the report to Parliament.
Many local governments also undertake SoE reporting.
An important function of an SoE report is to compare how the environment
is changing over time. The 2003 report is therefore a comparison
of the current environmental situation to that of 5 years ago in
South Australia.
What is the Structure of an SoE Report?
The most common structure used in SoE reports is the 'Pressure
- State - Response' (PSR) model. Using this model, the state of
the environment is assessed by looking at what pressures
are impacting on the environment, what condition (or state)
the environment is in, and what is happening in response
to the issues.

Environment Reporting Themes
The State of the Environment Report for South Australia 2003 is
divided into themes to help classify the environment. In South Australia,
the 7 themes are: atmosphere, inland waters, coasts and the sea,
land resources, biodiversity, human settlements and heritage. Each
environmental theme reports on a number of environmental issues.
These have been chosen for the report as the main topics of concern
within each theme. For example, under the atmosphere theme, the
major issues are air quality, ozone depletion and the enhanced greenhouse
effect. For each issue, environmental indicators are used to measure
the condition of the environment.
Each theme is represented in the education resource with an icon:
Atmosphere |
Land
resources |
Biodiversity
|
Human
settlements |
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Coasts and the sea |
Heritage
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Inland
waters |
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What is an Indicator?
Environmental monitoring and reporting helps to track major trends
and changes within a system. Indicators help to make the monitoring
and reporting process simpler. The same indicators can be measured
and compared over time so that reporting remains uniform and relevant.
In relation to the PSR model (or adaptations of the model), there
are 3 types of indicators:
Pressure
indicators describe the pressures from human activity that
affect the environment
State
(or condition) indicators measure the quality of the environment
and the functioning of important environmental processes
Response
indicators identify the human actions or efforts that have been
made to address pressures on the environment.
How Does Sustainability Relate to
SoE Reporting?
Sustainability is the ability of the earth and its ecosystems
and resources being maintained into the future and keep providing
a healthy home for humans and all other species of plants and animals.
Environmental management and monitoring is a very important part
of building a sustainable world. SoE reporting helps us to measure
whether or not our actions are achieving sustainability. For example,
we can measure how much water we are using from the River Murray
and work out if we can keep using that amount in the future. Close
study of the SoE Report for South Australia 2003 will show us that
the way we are using water from the Murray can not be sustained
into the future. When we work out that our actions are unsustainable,
we need to think of ways to achieve sustainability.
Linking SoE with Teaching
The Environmental Reporting Education web site is designed to connect
with learning and learning outcomes in the South Australian Curriculum
Standards and Accountability (SACSA) Framework. The environmental
reporting education web-site includes comprehensive and up-to-date
information on the state of our environment, provides multiple pathways
to access information, identifies resources and demonstrates possibilities
for taking environmental action.
The information is designed so that teachers and students can construct
learning opportunities in different ways, accounting for diversity
of approaches to teaching and learning. Multiple levels of complexity
built into the web-site provide the opportunity for learners to
continually extend and deepen what they have already learned. Therefore,
the environmental reporting education web-site is designed to be
used with Essential Learnings, Enterprise and Vocational Education
(EVE), and Cross Curriculum Perspectives.
Environmental reporting education supports children and students
to develop understandings, capacities and dispositions to engage
with changing times as thoughtful, active, responsive and committed
local, national and global citizens.
Acknowledgments
The Environmental Education Unit of the Department for Environment
and Heritage would like to acknowledge many contributors from the
Department for Education and Children's Services, the Office of
Sustainability, the DEH web unit and Corporate Profile for the development
of this site.
Special thanks goes to Simon Kneebone for his illustrations.
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