MyWonderfulWorld

EE Week Guest Blogger Series: Wondrous Wetlands

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Student1.JPGTasha Kiemel teaches 4th grade at Discovery Elementary School in Sammamish, Washington, and she serves on the National Environmental Education Week (EE Week) Teachers Advisory Committee. EE Week promotes understanding and protection of the natural world by actively engaging K-12th grade students and educators in an inspired week of environmental learning before Earth Day. This year's EE Week celebration occurs April 12-18, 2009, and the theme is Be Water Wise! To learn more or get involved, visit www.eeweek.org.

Wondrous Wetlands
Wetlands can provide all sorts of learning opportunities for young learners. From practicing observation skills, identifying native plants and animals, and monitoring water sources, the wetland behind Discovery Elementary School in Sammamish, WA, is a true outdoor science classroom. 

The most recent project underway in the wetland involves streambed restoration. Several years ago, the city put in a boardwalk along the southern border of the wetland, causing extreme damage to a natural streambed. Up until this past fall, the streambed was not flowing naturally and relied on the assistance of a tarp. Amphibians and other water life could not make a home in this type of unnatural habitat. It was a call to action.


TeacherStudents.JPGLast year, a group of gifted 4th graders designed, tested, and presented streambed restoration plans to local city officials. A plan was chosen for this year's group of 4th graders to implement. In September, students spent two days in the streambed with a local biologist removing the tarp and adding log and rock barriers and emergent plants. To determine the success of the plan, 4th took monthly water samples and tested them using simple water kits. In the weeks to come, students will reevaluate the overall success of the project and determine whether modifications need to be made.


This project has definitely made the students more aware of the world around them and the importance of taking responsibility for their actions. While they were not the ones to damage the streambed, they have learned that they have the ability (and responsibility) to create a positive change in the environment.  These students see themselves as stewards of the Discovery Wetland and are willing to do anything necessary to keep it healthy.

ClassPhoto.JPGTasha Kiemel  

Look for posts from additional guest bloggers as we approach EE Week 2009, April 12-18.

Images courtesy Tasha Kiemel


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3 Comments

Hooray for the Discovery Elementary students who model sustainability of the natural world! Your stewardship efforts will not go unnoticed! This is the best of "citizen science" !! I will love sharing your efforts with other schools we work with.
Educator and Environmental Sustainability Advocate,
Kayleen Pritchard of Pacific Education Institute

Congratulations on how you are integrating outdoor learning in your teaching day. Your efforts will change the way your students interact with the natural environment for years to come!

Bravo to all who work to preserve and restore our valuable wetland areas. Educating our children is arguably the best investment that can be made for the future. It is a shame that the government agencies entrusted to enforce wetlands regulations, etc can themselves sometimes damage these sensitive environments. Please visit http://saveourwetlands.blogspot.com/ to see how the FDOF bulldozed over 1/2 mile of wetlands (including a creek) with no reasonable justification. Adding insult to injury, the SJRWMD has taken the position that nothing wrong was done. The story, the pictures, and the documents we are posting indicate otherwise.

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