Green Strides Webinars: August Series

July 31st, 2012 by Andrea Suarez Falken

The Green Strides Webinar Series is designed to connect school communities and state and local education officials to existing federal resources that support the three pillars identified in the U.S. Department of Education (US ED) Green Ribbon Schools recognition award program:  (1) Reduced Environmental Impact and Costs, (2) Improved Health and Wellness, and (3) Effective Environmental and Sustainability Education.  The series is hosted by the U.S. Department of Education, in conjunction with numerous other federal agencies.  This August, the Green Strides Webinar Series will be conducted on:

Improving Air Quality with Transportation Changes
 style= August 1, 2012 from 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.

This webinar will review simple techniques that a school can employ to reduce children’s exposure to air toxics. Many of these solutions also save schools and parents money.

Register Here!

Image: via Flickr user John Picken.
Environmental Education for Everyone: EPA’s ‘K through Grey’ Resources
 style= August 8, 2012 from 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.

EPA’s Office of Environmental Education (OEE), has a wealth of resources that educators can use in classrooms and informal educational settings, or in their development of broader curricula.  “K through Grey” will walk you through programs for students of all ages.

Register Here!

Image: via EPA OEE.
Andrea Suarez Falken is Special Assistant and Acting Program Manager of the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon Schools.

Chesapeake Bay Trust and EPA Announce New Environmental Education Capacity Building Grant Program

July 30th, 2012 by Molly

EPA Region 3 Administrator Shawn Garvin.

The Chesapeake Bay Trust will boost its efforts to advance environmental literacy for students throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed with funding from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  Under the new Environmental Education Capacity Building Grant Program, the Trust will award sub-grants up to $5,000 to increase the capacity of the environmental education community in Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington, DC and West Virginia.

“Advancing environmental education is a crucial step to restoring the Chesapeake Bay,” said Shawn M. Garvin, EPA mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator.  “By providing funding for local efforts to increase the capacity of organizations to educate the public about the environment, we increase our chances that residents will make smart, educated decisions that help our waterways and advance our restoration goals.”

Applications for this program will be accepted through August 31, 2012 and must address both educational and environmental priorities as identified in the request for proposals.  Eligible applicants* include local education agencies, colleges and universities, state education and environmental agencies, as well as non-profit organizations to fund environmental education trainings, workshops, and educational outreach.

Specifically, applications should: 1) create and support high quality programs and educational methods that advance regional environmental education goals; 2) support state frameworks that enable students to graduate with the knowledge and skills necessary to make informed environmental decisions; 3) provide professional development opportunities for teachers and other educators; and 4) provide access for schools to maintain buildings, grounds, and operations that support positive environmental and human health outcomes.

“Every year the Chesapeake Bay Trust devotes significant resources to advance environmental education efforts throughout the Bay watershed,” said Trust Executive Director Jana Davis. “Our goal is to teach individuals, both children and adults, why they should care about the Bay so that they will be empowered to take action and improve it.  Education is the first step in a long series of efforts that is necessary to truly make a difference for our waterways.”

“Recent studies have shown that providing students with environmental education opportunities not only increases their capacity and interest in learning, but also contributes to science, math, reading, and social studies aptitude,” continued Davis.  “Partnerships like this one with the EPA on environmental education will serve as a much-needed resource to continue to advance educational efforts throughout our region.”

For more information and to apply for the Environmental Education Capacity Grant Program, visit www.cbtrust.org.

*Individual primary and secondary schools are not eligible to apply for Environmental Education Capacity Building Grants.  Applicants from Maryland or Washington, D.C. interested in Environmental Education projects targeting K-12 students to provide resources for Meaningful Watershed Education Experiences should refer to the Mini Grant Application Package for K-12 Environmental Education.  The Mini Grant program is currently open, and will accept applications for awards of up to $5,000 until August 10th.
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.

Celebrating School-Wide Environmental Learning at Folger McKinsey ES

July 23rd, 2012 by Sue Rodger

Folger McKinsey second grade students seining.

At Folger McKinsey Elementary, our Maryland Green School and newly awarded National Green Ribbon status are part of the daily educational experience and integral to the culture that is fostered in and out of the classroom.  Dedicated to fostering life-long learners, the school capitalizes on every opportunity to promote environmental literacy.  “Being green” is much more than a few environmental science lessons and recycling.  It is part of the school culture in which lessons and activities that increase environmental understanding and responsibility are implemented whenever and wherever possible. In addition to grade level specific programs, school-wide educational activities allow students to experience the environment. Every little bit makes a difference…

The Greater Severna Park Watershed Action Group hosts an annual Earth Day Festival, drawing thousands to participate in environmental education.  Folger students and staff participate annually, both the day of with a demonstration and activity booth, as well as in the planning and implementation of the event.  Earth Day actually becomes “Earth Month” at Folger as the school gears up for the Festival, along with capitalizing on the popularity of the environment as a hot topic in April.  Each grade level creates or updates its tri-fold that is on display at the Festival.  Each grade highlights one environmental activity or concept that takes place at Folger throughout the year.  The PTO organizes volunteers to lead interactive games at the Folger booth, including the “Trash Challenge” and “Our Earth is in Jeopardy” quiz game.  Scout troops from the school created the banner for the booth.  As a result, the entire school takes part in making our school’s booth a reality.

At the recent Spring Concert, featuring the orchestra, band and chorus, parents were informed that there would no longer be a printed program in an effort to reduce paper and energy in creating it.

Read Across America Day celebrates reading by honoring Dr. Seuss and Folger makes this day special with “celebrity” guest readers in every class.  A “green” component was added to the event two years ago and it wasn’t eggs!  Instead, each student is asked to donate a gently-used book to be shared with a reading program in a neighboring area that seeks to get books in the hands of children who would not otherwise have access to reading materials.

The importance of recycling is highlighted with an annual classroom challenge.  Students are encouraged to bring in magazines and catalogs from home to be recycled at school.  The items are measured to track just how much paper is coming into our homes and to highlight how we can reduce this and why it’s crucial to recycle, rather than just throw in the trash.  The prize for the class that recycles the most is an extended recess with team-building games led by volunteers.  Being outside is a great place to learn – and this kind of prize instills a renewed appreciation for the earth.

America Recycles Day is gaining attention and it was added to the calendar at Folger. Parent volunteers met with all 22 classes on this Fall day to remind students about recycling in class and in the cafeteria.  Lessons focused on what is recyclable and the difference recycling makes to the environment.  Taking it a step further, the presentation also addressed reducing waste through packing re-usable lunches.  For participating, every student was entered into a raffle and all prizes promoted the environment:  t-shirts with “green” messages, pencils made from recyclable material and re-usable lunch boxes, containers, utensils and water bottles.  All of this reinforces the message and helps students to actually make the step in improving their actions.

Capitalizing on pop-culture, the popularity of The Lorax movie was integrated into the classroom at many grade levels.  For example, students made posters in which their faces were placed on the Lorax then asked what he/she does or will do to save the earth.  This activity engages students of all ages and instills in them the idea that they indeed make a difference and their actions and ideas matter.

Classroom lessons, field trips, activities, community partnerships – they all help to promote environmental stewardship at Folger.  The Maryland Green School flag and National Green Ribbon are not just on display at Folger McKinsey Elementary; they are a way of learning and green living. At Folger McKinsey Elementary School, we seize every opportunity to make the connection between traditional curriculum requirements with the natural world, using the environment as a valuable instructional tool to attain educational objectives, in part by simply getting outside.

Sue Rodger is a First Grade Teacher and is the Environmental Committee Chairman at Folger McKinsey Elementary School.

Green Strides Webinar: Reducing Radon in Schools

July 16th, 2012 by Andrea Suarez Falken

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency experts will provide information about Reducing Radon in School during the next Green Strides webinar.

Effective radon control is a critical component of any comprehensive indoor air quality (IAQ) management program. Attend the Technical Webinar – Reducing Radon in Schools on Wednesday, July 18, 2012, from 2 – 3:30 p.m. EDT, to learn how to manage this pollutant.

This webinar will provide an overview of the issue of radon in schools with specific technical guidance about effective radon testing and control strategies, including how to operate and install a radon mitigation depressurization system in a school. Radon experts Josh Miller and Josh Kerber from the Minnesota Department of Health, both specialists in radon control in school environments, will be featured in this webinar.

States, districts and schools may attend this webinar to:

  • Learn about the risk of radon in schools and why it’s necessary to test every school for radon.
  • Discover effective and practical strategies for radon testing and control, including continuous radon monitoring (CRM).
  • Apply mitigation techniques, such as sub-slab depressurization and HVAC modification.
  • Get answers to your technical radon questions from leading radon experts.
  • Increase your understanding of how radon management fits into an integrated school environmental health program with the Framework for Effective School IAQ Management and how it helps meet the Department of Education’s Green Ribbon Schools requirements for Pillar Two – healthy school environments.

Register today!

This webinar is offered at no cost to participants. Don’t miss your chance to have your questions answered by experts. Send your questions to IAQTfSConnector@cadmusgroup.com by July 11, 2012.

Please note: This webinar will last approximately 90 minutes. You will need a high-speed Internet connection and a telephone line to interact with speakers and other participants. Call-in information will be provided upon registration.

Andrea Suarez Falken is Special Assistant and Acting Program Manager of the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon Schools.

Greening all Grades at Folger McKinsey Elementary School

July 9th, 2012 by Sue Rodger

First grade students at Folger McKinsey plant milk-week and other plants for our butterfly garden.

Students at Folger McKinsey Elementary learn many environmental lessons in school that they put into practice on a daily basis, both at school and home because they all eat, breathe and sleep in the shadow of this great estuary.  As such, Folger staff recognizes the importance of instilling environmental stewardship and capitalize on the opportunity to promote such an understanding as often as possible.  This is done through classroom lessons across all disciplines. Folger students enjoy the many benefits of living and attending school in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.  With privileges come responsibility and the Folger education includes many lessons in all grade levels that are geared toward developing ownership of that responsibility by creating life-long learners committed to environmental stewardship.

Kindergarten classes have been involved in recycling this year via daily use of the recycle bin in the classroom and recycling at lunch. Children participated in an environmental education trip to Camp Woodlands in which lessons about trees were taught. Students learned about the parts of trees, the functions of the parts, the life cycle of trees, and how trees benefit animals and humans. The visit culminated in a tree being planted at Folger’s temporary location, Chesapeake Bay Middle Schoo. Kindergarteners also participated in environmentally themed class science projects focusing on soil, decomposition, and recycling. Finally, Kindergarten monthly newsletters and homework are sent home electronically.

First grade has been doing a year-long study of the monarch butterfly. In the fall we got monarch caterpillars and raised them through all stages in our classroom tents. We released about 16 butterflies throughout the month of October. During the winter, we went to the greenhouse at CAT North where we did monarch activities and planted milk-week and other plants for our butterfly garden. In May, we planted these plants in our butterfly garden at our newly renovated school. In the fall, we will be able to find our own caterpillars from our butterfly garden and use the milk-weed leaves that we are growing to feed them.

Additionally, first grade raised two terrapins this year, as we have done for the past 6 or 7 years, through the head start program in conjunction with Arlington Echo and the MD Department of Natural Resources. First grade also learned about Integrated Pest Management (the use of natural processes of nature rather than pesticides) through study of a STEM unit called Marianna Becomes A Butterfly concentrating on Agricultural Engineering.

The 100+ students in second grade recently made their annual pilgrimage to the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) in Edgewater, MD.  During the day, students engaged in numerous hands-on lessons to bear witness to the importance of the Chesapeake.  Lessons focused on habitat exploration of aquatic and terrestrial animals, plants, water and soil.  The kids had a great time seining in the Bay to see what kind of habitat the Bay truly is, as well as examining oyster shells and trees.  Lessons also focused on how people influence the ecosystem.  This was evident, for example, when kids compared Chesapeake oyster shells of today to those of 50 years ago.  They could appreciate the considerable difference in size and how over-fishing, development, and activities on the Bay have affected the oysters; and how that in turn has resulted in the poor water quality of the Bay.  Students made connections to where they live, knowing that the Magothy River received a “D” on its report card and that they are not allowed to swim in the river following rain due to the poor water quality.  The lessons did not stop with understanding the situation and history; students also learned about what they need to be doing to solve the problem. By exploring nature through such hands-on, outdoor learning, the students appreciate and respect the natural world of which they are a part and the role they play in improving it.

The third graders at Folger have worked hard this year to maintain a “green” classroom environment. Students are mindful about recycling throughout the school day, both in the classroom and cafeteria. They have utilized the technology our school provides to help eliminate the use of extra paper. Dry erase boards are used often in math, and to reduce the use of tissues or paper towels as erasers, they reuse old socks. Third graders have also learned in science about water conservation and the use of a compost pile.

A week before Thanksgiving, Folger McKinsey’s fourth grade took a trip to Arlington Echo. The students experienced education in an outdoor setting during a series of hands-on activities. They tested water clarity and the effects of runoff pollution and sought solutions to each of these local environmental problems. The students also took time to learn about local crops and made their own applesauce. The trip was a great way for the students to experience the concepts that they were learning in science and see the practical application of their studies. The students are now researching an environmental issue that they will propose a policy or law change to help resolve the problem.

In the fall of 2011, fifth graders were tasked with solving erosion and stormwater management in the neighborhood around the school.  Classroom instruction, via a presentation from an Arlington Echo Outdoor Education Specialist, introduced the students to the challenges of development in the area and the impact to the water quality and habitat of the Chesapeake Bay.  Provided with information about native plants, the students applied their math skills to create a budget and plotted a map using native plants to help with stormwater management. Students took a field trip up the road to actually plant trees and shrubs to address the real-world problem.  This environmental project included a STEM project-based activity.

These are just some of the many examples of our students actively learning about the environment.  At Folger McKinsey, students are inspired to be life-long learners taking action to serve the environment in which they live!

Sue Rodger is a First Grade Teacher and is the Environmental Committee Chairman at Folger McKinsey Elementary School.

Wild Is The Way

July 2nd, 2012 by Claire

Can't you just see the splash coming?! Jump into professional development by participating in the Chesapeake Classrooms!

One group of Chesapeake Classrooms teachers was able to band terns with an expert from USFWS on a spit of sand near Fox Island.

Sometimes teachers get so busy trying to inform, that we squander our chances to help students form.  We lose sight of what is important; my week with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation brought everything back into focus, and my goals for the new school year include taking time (and making time) to allow my students to connect with nature.  The Chesapeake Classrooms course allowed me to become the student again and realize the value of these necessary experiences.

We were led by Bart Jaeger with collaboration from Shawn Ridgely, Adam Wickline and Bob Lehman.  These educators love the bay.  They love it because they know it, and they know the bay because they experience it with every fiber of their being; I think brackish water must flow along with the blood that runs through their veins.  I would be willing to bet that they are truly at their happiest when totally immersed in the bioregion of the Chesapeake Bay.

We started the week’s study at the Horn Point Laboratory (outside Cambridge, MD) learning about the lab’s role in indentifying solutions for restoring the bay which include researching submerged aquatic vegetation, and providing the largest hatchery on the East Coast for developing oyster spat used to re-seed depleted oyster beds.  We gleaned plenty of information to keep us thinking, questioning, and connecting the vital work being performed at the lab with our experiences throughout the week.

I car-pooled with 3 colleagues, and we continued driving through the Blackwater Wildlife Refuge.  We all marveled as I braked for a heron and egret as they gracefully lifted their long legs, searching for food at the road’s edge.  Since the road went directly through the marsh (and is occasionally underwater at high tide), extra caution was needed when driving.  This gave us an opportunity to slow down and observe; this was a fitting and important prelude to the entire week.

We chose our sleeping quarters, and met Shawn at the dock for a crab-pot-setting cruise.  After boarding the Karen N., we motored out to Hooper Strait in the Tangier Sound.  Shawn and Bart led a discussion on the history, anatomy and benefits of the fish we were using for crab bait; the lowly menhaden has an important role in the ecosystem, yet there are few limits to prevent over-fishing which has led to disruptions in the food chain.

The baiting/setting process was quite a production for us:  flip the pot, bait the trap, secure the bait-trap, remove and unwind the float, secure the opening, toss the float, wait for the signal, toss the pot.  And that was just setting them; we’d need to do all the steps in reverse when collecting them the next afternoon with the added steps of hooking and pulling up the pots.  We all gained new respect for the watermen who do this day in and day out, often alone.

After dinner, Bart guided us through the development of our organizing question:  How has the change in the natural and social systems had an effect on the health of the Chesapeake Bay?   Already, the experiences from the afternoon and evening were helping us formulate a response.  We found that we were steadily refining the question and looking at it from different points of view as the learning continued throughout the week.  Aren’t we like our students; don’t we want them to form opinions and responses based on thorough consideration?

The next day brought canoeing, marsh mucking, bay wading, shore exploring, a trip to Deal Island, oyster dredging,  a crab feast, and a light show provided by mother nature.  The canoeing, mucking, wading and exploring were all combined in our study of the natural system of the marsh as we discovered its value, purpose and function.  On closer inspection, we found that there was a diversity of vegetation and animals and a discussion of interdependence followed.  The experiences of this day were empowering; don’t we want our students to gain and feel the empowerment of accomplishing goals that may have previously been denied because of fear or lack of exposure to an activity?  Isn’t a stronger sense of self an essential goal for all students?

Our trek to Fox Island would be by way of proggin’ on Holland Island, passing South Marsh Island and the Martin Wildlife Refuge, and visiting the communities on Smith Island.  These events brought us face-to-face with the ‘social systems’ portion of our organizing question; these communities are shrinking just as quickly as the erosion is claiming the shoreline.  Our visit allowed us to see firsthand the fierce pride and determination that embody the Islanders.  While we question the affects of the social and natural systems on the health of the Bay, one cannot help but wonder about the influences of the social and natural systems upon each other.

Our arrival at the final destination on Fox Island required transferring to a skiff with a shallow draw; the tide would not allow our boat to venture beyond the channel.  Adam met us and prepared us for the most challenging part of the week—learning to live simply.  The lack of distractions allowed us to take advantage of simple pleasures such as marveling at the ability of the comb jellies to glow when agitated and wonder about the feeder fish attracted to a battery operated spotlight lowered into the water.  We had the time to take on the persona of the hunters that used Fox Island as we canoed into the duck blinds the next day and explored nearby marsh islands.  We watched with awe (and a little fear) as an evening storm approached and inundated the lodge.  With all manmade distractions (and conveniences) stripped away, it was a chance to reconnect with nature and find the wholeness that we often don’t realize is even missing.  Fox Island is magical to me; it provided a means to “strengthen the core skills underlying all learning: concentration, observation, relaxation, and open, receptive awareness with a positive, curious attitude.” (McHenry and Brady, 2009)  As a class, our best discussions and exchanges happened at Fox.  At our final group meeting, Bart encouraged us to use what we’ve learned and experienced to influence how we teach our students:  “You’re good enough.  You’re strong enough.  People like you.  Make it happen.”  I feel privileged to have been on such an inspiring adventure!  As teachers, don’t we all want to have that kind of positive impact on our students?

A plaque on a bench by the dock at Fox put everything in perspective:  ‘Open Spaces, Sacred Places’.  What a perfect setting to sort things out and focus on the impact of our actions.  We were given the opportunity to see the big picture and come to the realization that we have more power than we know.  We may now have more questions than answers, but we are able to ask them through a filter of respect for this fragile, vulnerable, one-of-a-kind, no-other-place-on-earth crossroads that has retained its ‘wildness’.  I look forward to helping my students find meaningful, authentic learning experiences in nature; wild is the way!

Claire Gardner is a 1st grade teacher at Cedar Grove Elementary School in Montgomery County, Maryland.