While the need to educate for the formation of environmentally committed citizens is
something that has always been recognized, currently however it has become an obligation. The
present study analyzes the Doñana, Biodiversity and Culture Program from the perspective of its
participants. The program is part of the action being carried out with schools intending to teach
environmental citizenry using the context of protected natural spaces, in this specific case, the Doñana
National Park. The Park’s managers and public guides were interviewed, and observation records of
the process were collected. These were later analyzed by means of a category table elaborated within
the project Patrimonial Education for Citizens’ Territorial and Emotional Intelligence, of which this
study is a part. The consistency of the informants was verified, as also was the practice observed,
showing the importance of the socio-identity framework, of critical thinking, and of socio-affective
relationships with the territory.