Although they generally don’t watch TV, use the Internet, or play video games, kids in the rainforest do many of the same things you probably do. They play with friends, help their families with chores, and go to school.
Since “rainforest kids” live closer to nature than the average American child, they learn things that are helpful in the environment around them. From an early age many children learn how to fish, hunt, and collect materials and food from the forest. Instead of going to a playground or a shopping mall for fun, children in places like the Amazon spend most of their time outdoors playing in the forest and in rivers and streams.
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Review questions
- How are the lives of indigenous rainforest children different from lives of Western children?
- Rainforest peoples From our main rainforests web site
- Indigenous peoples news feed From Mongabay News
- Rainforest people news feed From Mongabay News
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