Why Teach About Weather and the Chesapeake Bay?

December 27th, 2010 by Sarah

The Chesapeake Bay Bridge in winter. Image courtesy of terrin in Virginia, Flickr, Creative Commons

After the recent snowfall, winter weather is on all of our minds.  With students (and sometimes teachers) eagerly awaiting the season’s snow days, it is a great chance to bring winter inside the classroom and teach about the impact weather has on the Chesapeake Bay.

Why Should YOU Teach about Weather?

Whether we like it or not, weather affects all of our lives on a daily basis.  Its influence can be as simple as determining if you need to bring an umbrella to work or as complex and important as impacting when animals migrate and when plants reproduce.

The Chesapeake Bay can be a great tool for teaching about the impacts weather can have on an ecosystem.  In the Chesapeake, rainfall affects the volume of water flowing into the bay.  Storms can stir up sediments that can harm shorelines and wildlife. They can contribute so much freshwater (in the form of rain and snow) to the ecosystem that it temporarily lowers the salinity of estuary waters.  Wind can help mix surface waters, increasing bay oxygen levels and impacting turbidity (how cloudy or clear water is).

Weather conditions can also be used to teach students about how we affect bay health. This winter season, as snow and ice melt, teachers can talk to their classes about how the salt and chemicals we use to keep our roads safe for driving can run off into bay waters. Precipitation in the winter and spring can also result in runoff that brings sediment and nutrient pollutants to the bay, greatly affecting summer water quality conditions.

How Can YOU Teach About Weather?

There are many ways to teach about weather in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.  From using data collected with the Chesapeake Bay Interpretive Buoy System (CBIBS) to explore temperature and turbidity to learning about how ocean affects air temperatures, Bay Backpack has a boat load of resources that can help you plan lessons for your class.  Here are some links to help you get started:

Sarah Brzezinski works for the Chesapeake Research Consortium as the Chesapeake Bay Program's Fostering Stewardship and Education Workgroup Team Staffer. She also serves as the content manager of Bay Backpack.

Teacher and Student of the Year Awards: Apply NOW – Deadline is Jan. 3!

December 21st, 2010 by Molly

There are exceptional people making strides to help the environment every day. They are teachers, working to educate our children about Chesapeake Bay history and ecology. Or they are students implementing school recycling programs and teaching their peers about the importance of rain gardens. The bottom line is that there are people all over the six-state Chesapeake Bay watershed working to restore the Chesapeake to what it once was. Before heading out for winter break later this week, be sure to get your applications in for the Jan. 3 deadline for the Teacher and Student of the Year Awards sponsored by the Chesapeake Bay Trust!

To help honor those creative individuals in Maryland, the Chesapeake Bay Trust created its annual awards program.

Each year, the Trust awards more than $20,000 in grants, scholarships and monetary gifts to educators, students, and individuals committed to improving the health of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

Through our awards program, we recognize individuals who stand out for their dedication to environmental education, community outreach, and on-the-ground restoration projects and programs.  Recipients are judged based on criteria specific to each award category.  Collectively, however, all recipients have one trait in common: a passion for the Chesapeake Bay and protecting its future.

The deadline is quickly approaching for two of the Trust’s award programs. A Jan. 3, 2011 deadline will be imposed on the Teacher of the Year Award and the brand new Student of the Year Award.  Recipients for each will be announced during the Trust’s Legislative Reception in January.

The Trust wants to celebrate the good work being done here in Maryland and hopes that you will help identify candidates who should be recognized for their contributions.

Do you know a student or teacher making a difference in their local communities and the environment? Then PLEASE encourage them to apply.

Student of the Year Award
$5,000 scholarship to an outstanding student in Maryland
The Trust’s Student of the Year Scholarship recognizes a Maryland high school or college student who has shown an outstanding commitment to environmental stewardship, Chesapeake Bay restoration and community involvement. You can access the complete eligibility requirements and apply online here.

Teacher of the Year Award
$2,500 award to an outstanding educator in Maryland
The Chesapeake Bay Trust’s Teacher of the Year Award recognizes a Maryland educator who has shown an outstanding commitment to environmental education. The winning applicant will receive a $2,500 cash prize as well as (up to) a $5,000 mini grant to the winner’s school. You can access the complete eligibility requirements and apply online here.

Help us showcase all the good work being done to restore and protect the Chesapeake Bay.

Additional Resources:
Funding opportunities – Bay Backpack

Molly Alton Mullins is the director of communications and development for the Chesapeake Bay Trust. She can be reached at 410-974-2941, ext. 107 or at mmullins@cbtrust.org.

Why Become a Certified Environmental Educator?

December 20th, 2010 by Lindsay

An environmental educator demonstrates how to build a model with his students.

What does it mean to be an environmental educator?

“We are not camp counselors,” says Keith Williams, Director of Education for NorthBay Environmental Education Center. Yet, that is the perception of many. The Maryland Association for Outdoor and Environmental Education (MAEOE) offers an environmental educator certification program which is designed to be accredited by the North American Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE) that defines the profession and the professional around six themes:

  • Environmental Literacy
  • Foundations of Environmental Education
  • Professional Responsibilities
  • Planning and Implementing Environmental Education
  • Fostering Learning
  • Assessment and Evaluation

Certification requires educators to demonstrate what they know and can do within each of these six themes. The application includes a portfolio with examples of lesson plans or video tapes of teaching techniques to demonstrate their proficiency in these six themes, as well as passing an exam.

Becoming a certified professional environmental educator has many benefits including:

  • Professional recognition
  • Personal growth
  • Building professional contacts

Applicants should have at least two years of field experience before applying and scholarships are available for those with demonstrated need. Find out more about MAEOE’s Professional Environmental Education Certification Program HERE.

Lindsay Eney is the Communications Staffer at the Chesapeake Bay Program.

President’s Environmental Youth Awards: Apply TODAY!

December 13th, 2010 by Lindsay

Presidential plaques awarded to regional winners in 2008. Photo source: U.S. EPA

As the year comes to a close, things are getting hectic for a lot of teachers and students, but there’s one more thing to consider including in your end-of-year tasks and festivities: the President’s Environmental Youth Award, sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The PEYA program is designed to promote awareness of our nation’s natural resources and encourages positive community involvement among the nation’s youth. The program, in place since 1971, recognizes young people across the U.S. for protecting our nation’s air, water, land, and ecology each year. There are two parts to the program: regional certificate and regional award.

While the regional certificate program accepts projects on a rolling basis year-round, the deadline for the regional award program is Dec. 31. Don’t let the rapidly approaching deadline discourage you from applying though – there is still plenty of time if your project is already in place! Encourage your students to look at the eligibility requirements and application to see if they might have a chance at being a winner!

One exemplary project from each region in the country is selected for national recognition. The projects are developed by young individuals, school classes (K-12), summer camps, and youth organizations to promote environmental stewardship. Winning projects in the past have covered a wide range of subject areas, including:

  • environmental science projects,
  • recycling programs in schools and communities,
  • construction of nature preserves,
  • major tree planting programs, and
  • videos, skits, and newsletters that focused on environmental issues.

In the past, winners have had the opportunity to take a trip to Washington, D.C., tour the White House, meet the EPA Administrator and in some cases, even meet the President of the United States. This year, there may be a more regionally based trip, but regardless, the winning projects will receive national recognition and a presidential plaque for their projects.

Each student or group of students presenting their project must be sponsored by an adult, who may be a parent, teacher, or adviser among others. Help the environmental youths in your life gain national recognition for all the hard work they do! Get those applications in by Dec. 31 and you never know – your students could be PEYA winners!

If you miss the deadline for the awards competition, don’t forget that you can submit your application for the recognition program at any time! Other youth programs can also be found on the EPA’s website.

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Lindsay Eney is the Communications Staffer at the Chesapeake Bay Program.

Paddling the Potomac: A MWEE to Remember

December 6th, 2010 by Page

Students on the "Paddling the Potomac" trip get the hang of paddling their canoes from one stop to the next. Photo courtesy of Page Hutchinson.

The morning mist rises above the river while a great blue heron leads the way. Besides the occasional cry of a Kingfisher, the only sound is of many paddles dipping in and out of the water. I know it won’t stay this blessedly peaceful and quiet for long once the 19 eighth graders find their rhythm and wake to the day.

This is our third morning of paddling on the Potomac River after spending the night camping in one of the many sites along the C&O Canal. Some of these children have never camped or canoed and are finally finding their daily stride. Today we made it onto the river in record time after requiring that the tents get packed before breakfast…good motivation!

Many years ago, Judy Cutright and I were  both teachers at J.P. Burley Middle School in Albemarle County. We developed this fall trip we call “Paddling the Potomac” in conjunction with The Mountain Institute in Spruce Knob, W. Va. Every year, we’ve tweaked the trip just a bit to make it better than the previous year.

On the first day, we meet TMI staff at Little Orleans on the Maryland side of the river. The students learn how to pack and seal a dry bag since we carry all our gear in the canoes with us. Usually they arrive with way more than they need and we have to convince them that their long underwear is more important than their favorite stuffed animal brought along for comfort.

Next is safety and paddling instruction. It may seem crazy, but yes, we takechildren on the river who have never paddled a canoe. The first day is always a little frenetic with canoes zigzagging back and forth across the river, heading the wrong direction or going in circles, but we coach them along and they finally get it. The shallowness of the river lessens any danger and we all wear life vests.

Students navigate to their next stopping point along the Potomac River. Photo courtesy of Page Hutchinson.

TMI provides one land guide who sees us off in the morning and then drives to our daily stopping point to mark it with hot pink plastic flagging ribbon easily seen from the river. Often, the TMI guide has to hike or ride a bike into the camp site since not all of them are easily accessible to a parking area. After several years of experimenting, we’ve finally worked out the distance between stopping points well enough that we land before dark.

We haul the gear, both personal and group, out of the canoes and pass it up to the campsite “bucket brigade” style. Due to erosion, most of our landing sites are steep and not conducive to individuals running back and forth. This teaches our students two great lessons: teamwork and erosion.

Trip participants pass supplies and gear along an assembly line from the canoes to camp for the night. Photo courtesy of Page Hutchinson.

Next is dividing into cook crew and tent crew. Every evening a different small group of students has the opportunity to cook dinner on portable camping stoves for the rest of the group, which is another first for virtually all the students. The rest of the students set up tents.

Countless opportunities offer themselves up for watershed instruction: erosion, algal blooms, land use, tributaries, habitats, and so forth. We can pretend we are traveling water molecules, and history and the role the river has played rounds out the experience.

The second day we pull out at Hancock, Md. to walk the C&O Canal, read the historical plaques, study the locks and peruse the museum. Most fun are the old film clips of the canal in use.

The group poses for a photo at Fort Frederick. Photo courtesy of Page Hutchinson.

The third day we land at Fort Frederick and enjoy a leisurely afternoon learning about life in the fort and its many uses over the years. Best of all is a visit to the store for a soda, ice cream or candy. It’s been three days of no junk food, after all.

Our fourth and final day on the river is a short one, only a couple of miles. We pull out at McCoy’s Ferry, unload, and rack the canoes. Next stop: Antietam Battlefield by school bus.

This last night together, we’ve made camp at the Harper’s Ferry KOA for the express purpose of taking showers. Unpacking dry bags and getting showers is interspersed with setting up camp and starting a special celebratory meal of lasagna made in two Dutch ovens. The evening ends with us around the campfire delighting in s’mores followed by a talent show.

"Paddling the Potomac" is a Meaningful Watershed Educational Experience none of the participants will be soon to forget. Photo courtesy of Page Hutchinson.

The final day of the trip, Friday, takes us to historical Harper’s Ferry at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers, two rivers that have determined the fate of Harper’s Ferry. It is here we say goodbye to our beloved TMI staff who have to head back to Spruce Knob and deal with wet tents, mats, stacks of muddy dry bags, cooking gear, leftover food and the like. Living together as such a close community even for only five days makes this a heart-wrenching affair.

After a tour and some free time, we load up and head home to greet parents who can’t quite believe what they’ve just let their children do. Occasionally, I run into former trip participants and they never fail to mention it. “Remember when….”

It’s those moments that make it all worth it for the kids and for me – never mind four days of canoeing rather than being in the classroom!

Page Hutchinson is the MWEE Grant Coordinator for the Virginia Office of Environmental Education.