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Hands-on experience - May 13, 2004
By Brooke Leister, Staff Writer
/ Lexington Minuteman
Kids participate in Big Backyard program: Shaded by the
forest's canopy, fifth-grader Troy Moran peered through a
magnifying glass at the grayish-purplish lichen creeping up
the side of a tree.
"It looks like seaweed," he declared, while three of his
classmates crowded around. Each busily recorded their
observations in stapled packets of papers.
Throughout the year, the fifth-graders at Estabrook
Elementary School have walked through the school's
playground and the adjoining conservation land to explore
the natural world around them.
As part of the Big Backyard program, started at the school
10 years ago, students are given the opportunity to practice
inquiry-based learning as they study plants and creatures
living around the school.
"Instead of learning about it in the classroom, we get to
see it. Instead of learning about animals and their
hibernation, we get to see it. It's a better way of
learning," said Matt Tambor, an Estabrook fifth-grader.
His classmate Pooja Kumar, 11, said the students look
forward to Big Backyard excursions.
"I've learned something new every time we've been out. I've
learned about the plants and animals," said Kumar, who
started at Estabrook this year.
Prior to the recent walk through the school yard and woods,
the students listened to a 20-minute presentation by parent
volunteer Linda Arnow.
"Here in New England, we experience some of the most
dramatic weather changes of anywhere in the world," she
said. "... Today, we're looking for evidence of spring -
creatures that may have returned, evidence that things have
hatched and new growth."
While walking through the forest, volunteer Pat Magrath
Abel, the parent of an Estabrook fifth-grader, stopped the
group of four she was leading to give a short talk about
skunk cabbage. She asked each student to pull a couple of
leaves, rip them up and smell.
"Eww! It smells like skunk," squealed the two girls, while
Moran and Tambor ripped leaves and remarked over the plant's
look and smell.
Farther down the path, dotted with wooden planks to save
people from trudging through the mud, the students stopped
to examine turkey tails, a fungus growing on trees and
fallen logs.
"I find that as they get older they're more comfortable
expressing themselves. They seem to be generally
interested," said Magrath Abel, a program volunteer of five
years. "To be able to go out and explore nature and to have
this nature in their own backyard, it's fantastic."
The start of a Big idea
"My incentive for starting the program was I saw kids
studying it (science) in class, and I looked outside and saw
most of our elementary schools are surrounded by beautiful
conservation land, woods and playgrounds. It seemed like the
perfect connection," said Fran Ludwig, elementary curriculum
specialist in science for Lexington Public Schools.
Each of Lexington's elementary schools has a Big Backyard
Program. More than 400 volunteers, mostly parents, and 2,500
children currently participate in the program. Each grade
takes as many as four walks a year.
Through the school district's membership in a regional
educational collaborative, Ludwig was able to contact Bev
Morrison, a Wellesley resident who started a similar program
in the Wellesley district.
"Her (Morrison's) premise is to open kids' eyes, nose and
ears so they become observers. That generates questions,"
Ludwig said.
In the beginning, Morrison, who designed each nature walk,
provided training for the parent and community volunteers.
The goal was to train parent leaders so they could
eventually take over the program. Through the years, this
has happened.
"I've had parents who have told me how much more fun it is
to go out in the woods with their kids because they have
learned so much," Ludwig said. "I think we really need this
[program] because the kids get so far away from the Earth -
they're watching TV or playing computer games. Many of them
don't know where their food comes from or the relationship
between plants and animals. That's really a life skill."
Morrison, who was recently honored with the "Secretary's
Award for Excellence in Environmental Education for 2004"
from state Secretary of Environmental Affairs Ellen Roy
Herzfelder, hopes children learn to care about the world
through the program.
"We're not focusing on teaching facts, we're focusing on the
kids being self-learners - to be better stewards of the
world, to keep on learning throughout their adult lives,"
said Morrison, who will retire form the Wellesley program
next month. She has already retired from the Lexington
program.
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