bruce phillips' profile

What I do

I am the education officer for Wildscreen and it’s unique ARKive project. ARKive ARKive Images of life on Earth is the world’s centralised library of films and photographs of U.K. and the world’s endangered habitats and species (including all the great apes) – freely accessible to all online for private research and internal educational purposes. Hailed as the digital Noah’s Ark, it has won numerous education and communication awards since its launch by Sir David Attenborough in 2003.

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I am the Education Officer for Wildscreen and its ARKive project www.arkive.org which aims to collect images and film of every enadngered species on the planet. A hugely ambitious project but a great one for engaging the general public in natural history and the work that conservationists and scientists are doing all over the world.

Projects

The main ARKive website www.arkive.org is designed for a variety of users (11 years old and upwards). Its content consists of one of the largest collections of wildlife and environmental films and images that can be viewed for free, and is relevant to a wide range of science and geography subjects in primary or secondary schools and up to university standard (all can be downloaded free of charge).

ARKive Education (www.arkiveeducation.org) is for teachers and other educators – and offers downloadable briefings, lesson plans and project ideas to support curriculum learning targets. It too is free to use.

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