Education is a core part of the North Shore Land Alliance’s mission and is integral to helping community members understand the benefits associated with the preservation of Long Island’s land and waters and the important role land conservation plays in ensuring a healthy quality of life.
It is particularly important in these days and times that people understand the benefits of and timely need to preserve and protect our lands and waters. Without natural, undeveloped areas our community wouldn’t have the ability to recharge underground aquifers so critical to the quality and quantity of our drinking water. Without farmland we wouldn’t have access to healthy local food and much, much more.
Throughout the year, the Land Alliance organizes a series of educational activities and programs that help people better understand the important role land conservation plays in a healthy environment.
Educational Programs

Walks in the Woods
Established in 2007, our Walks in the Woods is series of free, educational and interactive explorations. They are designed to guide visitors of all ages through Long Island parks and nature preserves, many of which are off the beaten path, for investigation while educating them about the wildlife and plants that call them home. Participants also gain an understanding and appreciation of local land conservation and its benefits to our food and water supplies and wildlife habitats and its connection to the strength and health of our communities.

Long Island Water Education Program
Established in 2014, our Long Island Water Education Program educates fourth, fifth and sixth graders about Long Island’s water resources—particularly the sole-source aquifer that supplies our drinking water, as well as the streams, wetlands, bays and Sound that make Long Island such a desirable place to live.
Through interactive lessons, the program demonstrates the connection between protecting land and water and actively engages students in environmental stewardship.

O’Neil Conservation Stewards
The Land Alliance’s William C. and Joyce C. O’Neil Conservation Steward program delivers valuable conservation-related experiences to qualified college students interested in building a career in the protection of our natural resources.

Lectures and Seminars
The Land Alliance hosts lectures, seminars, panel discussions and workshops featuring leading experts on various timely and relevant topics. Our mission is to promote understanding and appreciation of land use, conservation, water, farming and the value of getting children outdoors.
Conservation News
Highlights from Our Educational Programs
Highlights from Our Educational Programs
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Long Island Water Education Program Expands to More Local Schools
Posted on November 6, 2015Continue readingThanks to a generous $40,000 grant received from the New York State Conservation Partnership program, our Water Education Program will continue for two additional years. This fall, we expanded to include Great Neck and Valley Stream School Districts in addition to the five with which we launched the program during the 2014/15 school year.
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Grant Funding Helps Sustain Our Water Education Program and the Acquisition of the Humes Property
Posted on June 27, 2015Continue readingLand Alliance awarded a $40,000 grant in support of our acquisition of the 28-acre Humes property in the Village of Mill Neck and an additional $40,000 to help sustain our Water Education Program in elementary school throughout Long Island.
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The Great Healthy Yard Project: Our Yards, Our Children, Our Responsibility!
Posted on June 9, 2015Continue readingMany of us do not connect our yards with our drinking water supply, but the chemicals we use on our lawns and gardens wash with rain and storm water into our streams, ponds, reservoirs and deep groundwater wells in measurable amounts. Together these water sources comprise our drinking water – and as a result, chemicals flow into our homes and bodies.
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2015 Long Island Food Conference Featuring Stephen Ritz
Posted on May 6, 2015Continue readingSponsored by the North Shore Land Alliance, the Long Island Food Conference (formerly the Small Farm Summit) was a full-day event dedicated to educating Long Islanders about the benefits of healthy eating, growing their own food, living sustainably and protecting our existing farms and farmland.




