It was established as the Council for the Promotion of Field Studies in 1943[1] to provide opportunities for school children to study plants and animals in their natural environment.[2] It subsequently became a nationwide provider of outdoor education, and has established a network of field centres providing facilities for people wanting to study natural history, ecology and the environment.[1][3]
Field Studies Council provides outdoor educational residential or day visits from the organisation's centres, and other outreach areas, including London parks.
The Field Studies Council creates a programme covering a wide variety of outdoor education, including fieldwork opportunities in geography and biology, providing fieldwork opportunities to allow students to investigative practical skills and to be given the chance to evaluate and analyse data they collect themselves, and data already held by the organisation.[19]
The Field Studies Council also publishes fold-out charts and guides.[20][21] BioLinks South East and BioLinks West Midlands are lottery funded schemes set up to strengthen UK biological recording.[22]
With the goal of promoting and improving geography fieldwork, the Field Studies Council has entered into a partnership with The Geographical Association. Together, they work towards creating cases for geography and fieldwork within policy, and creating resources for education and career development.[23]
Partnerships projects include:
Forgotten Places: Greening Coastal Towns and Cities[24]
^ abMiyake, Shiho; Nogami, Tomoyuki (September 2005). "The History of the Field Studies Council (FSC) in Britain : The Creation Period as the Council for the Promotion of Field Studies (C.P.F.S.) (1943-1955)". Journal of Science Education in Japan. 29 (3): 196–212. doi:10.14935/jssej.29.196.
^Barrett, John H (September 1987). "The Field Studies Council: how it all began". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 32 (1): 31–41. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1987.tb00408.x.