Be a Class Act: Join
Classroom FeederWatch
By Allison Childs Wells
Some teachers are actually encouraging their students to stare out the
window! Thats because theyre participating in Classroom FeederWatch, the
Labs exciting new citizen-science program that gives elementary- and middle-school
children a chance to learn about birds, computers, and a whole lot moreand to have
fun doing it.
"I never expected so many of my kids to get excited about
birds," says Michael Ashton, a Classroom Feeder- Watch teacher in Pennsylvania.
"Classroom FeederWatch really motivates them."
Created in cooperation with TERC, a curriculum and technology
development company based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Classroom Feeder- Watch gives
students the opportunity to participate in real hands-on science. They start by hanging
bird feeders outside their classroom windows (or some other location on their school
grounds), then follow the same easy-to-use protocol developed for Project
FeederWatchidentifying and counting the different bird species that visit their
feeders, recording the temperature, and taking notes on precipitation. "Classroom
FeederWatch teaches kids how to do science," says Susan Hoffman, a
teacher in Colorado who uses the program.
The data that the students record are sent to the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology, where they are analyzed and used to help scientists understand more about
bird-population changes, habitat preferences, and more. Students also use Classroom
FeederWatch to answer their own questions about bird biology and behavior, incorporating a
multidisciplinary approach that meets the new National Science Education Standards. They
present their findings through writing exercises and artwork and share their discoveries
over the Internet with fellow FeederWatch students throughout the country. "Its
been wonderful reading the notes from everyone across the nation," says Pat Hughes, a
Pennsylvania FeederWatch teacher. "This opportunity really enforces the idea of a
global community." Student findings are also published in Classroom Birdscope,
the national project newsletter that is sent to all participating classrooms.
The current Classroom FeederWatch program is the result of extensive
field testing by 180 teachers from 39 states. "In addition to ensuring that Classroom
FeederWatch would be an effective tool for educating kids, we needed to make certain the
curriculum would be easy for teachers to use and adaptable for those with time
constraints," says Rick Bonney, the Labs director of education. "The
feedback were getting from teachers this year is that Classroom FeederWatch is both
enjoyable and motivational, even for students whod previously shown little or no
interest in science."
If youre a teacher who hasnt yet discovered the fun and
effective educational opportunities bird watching offers, we invite you to clip the coupon
on page 10 and join Classroom FeederWatch. A $195 sign-up fee helps cover the cost of the
extensive written curriculum containing 15 explorations in which students learn to
identify birds, collect and analyze data about feeder birds, write reports based on their
own questions and findings, and learn bird biology. Also included in the curriculum are
simple instructions, transparencies, drawings of common feeder birds for coloring, student
work sheets, tally sheets for counting birds, color posters with accurate pictures of
feeder birds, and other learning tools that are fun and easy to use. Classrooms will also
be given password access to the Classroom FeederWatch web site, which features an
"Ask the Lab" page, a participant list, curriculum-support materials, as well as
a data-entry page for online data submissions. Membership to the Classroom FeederWatch
listservaccessible to participants exclusivelyis also part of the package.
Slides of common feeder birds, additional workbooks, posters, and Classroom Birdscope
issues are also available.
"Birds have given us a way to collect and analyze data and work
with scientists," says Celeste Bunting from Columbia, Maryland. "What a great
way to learn!"
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