Join The Wolves In School Program

Sign up here to download your free digital Wolf Education Guide available for grades 3-5, 6-8 and 9-12.

What Grade Do You Teach?*

Designed to teach children about the importance of protecting wolves to maintain a balanced ecosystem, the Species Unite Wolf Education Program is a crucial step in building a new generation of animal activists. Our goal is to expand this initiative to every state in the US, reaching hundreds of schools and over 100,000 students.

Be a part of the pilot program:

Species Unite is piloting our first ever wolf education in schools program designed to teach children about the importance of protecting wolves to maintain a balanced ecosystem.

We have developed a 6-week curricula and lessons for grades 3-5, 6-8 and 9-12 in collaboration with teachers across the country.

 

Receive a free curricula including lesson plans

The curricula include lessons on empathy, conservation, wildlife, wolves, wolf packs, and the human relationship to wolves. The program will conclude with students having the opportunity to write letters to the Secretary of the Interior expressing their support for protecting wolves.

 

Help change the narrative for wolves

We want to encourage 100,000 students to use their voices for wolves and send letters to the Department of the Interior requesting that wolves be relisted as endangered and given the protections they need.

Elizabeth Novogratz, Species Unite Founder

A message from our founder

Hi, I’m Elizabeth,

I’m excited and grateful that you and your students are taking part in our Wolf Education Program. Thank you for caring about empathy, conservation and our wolves as they are in dire need of our help. 

Wolves live primarily on federal land, which belongs to every child in the US. Wolves were the original inhabitants of this land and have caused no harm to humans and very little to livestock. But the Big Bad Wolf myth persists, leading to a complete massacre of these remarkable creatures.

When wolves were brought back to the US in the 90s, they transformed Yellowstone and its biodiversity. But, because they are not on the Endangered Species list in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming (where so many of them live) and because of changes to hunting regulations, they are severely at risk. We think that engaging children to care about the environment, biodiversity, their public lands, and the animals that inhabit them will inspire a better future for all.

Ready to help change the narrative for wolves?

Download your free digital Wolf Education Guide If you have any queries, please contact Elizabeth Novogratz directly at elizabeth@speciesunite.com.

What Grade Do You Teach?*