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Land Lab Points to Remember
- Document
every step with photos, video and notes.
- Be flexible
with your budget and "wish list". A happy balance must be
struck between these two topics in order to have a functional outdoor
classroom. Always ask, "Is there a better/cheaper way to accomplish
our plan?"
- Your labor
force could include: students, parents, scouts, retired citizens, club
members, inmates, students from other schools looking for community
service projects.
- Stay committed
to the project, even after it has been completed. So many labs fall
to the wayside because the one or few people who developed the lab,
leaves the school. Without someone to keep the lab working, all that
time, money and energy will have been wasted.
- Get the
students involved in the planning and construction. It helps give them
a sense of ownership, and could reduce vandalism.
- Make sure
everyone has fun. If this becomes a chore, then the project will be
short lived. Instead, add something new for the lab or find a new spin
on an old aspect.
- Don't forget
to participate in certification workshops like: Project WILD, Project
Learning Tree, Project WET, and Habitats for Learning.
- Consider
developing a library of activities which will be specifically used in
the land lab. Put items needed for different activities and stations
into large, labeled, plastic bins with lids, and keep them in the library.
- Keep things
simple. Each station should provide the basic materials, and the teachers
can bring the items needed for the lesson.
- Cheap and/or
free materials are available if you know where to look.
- Never overlook
the students' parents. This is a valuable professional resource.
- Almost any
subject can be taught in a land lab, not just science. It may take more
ingenuity and creativity, not necessarily money, to present a different
subject.
- Set the
rules for the outdoor classroom before going outside; which shouldn't
be much different than the rules for being inside. Enforce the rules
and maintain the lesson, otherwise the students may consider this an
extra recess.
- Land labs
may make some teachers uncomfortable, simply because he or she is not
familiar with nature. Take along some identification guides and a notebook
to record questions to be researched later.
Grant
Application Procedure Outline for Land
Lab Development
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