The Elementary
School classroom has seven basic elements:
- A blackboard -
with
age-appropriate activities that include a learning phase, where
information is read, and a testing phase, where the knowledge is
either tested in a quiz or matching exercise, used to fill in a form,
or put to use to solve a problem.
Also on the blackboard, a list
of relevant vocabulary - with
definitions just a click away.
A bookcase, with
a section that provides useful background information on each of the
Elementary School activities.
A computer gateway to
many of the environmental organizations and agencies that serve the
greater Potomac region.
A window to
some of our favorite Potomac Highlands images.
An "open book" with
a reading selection that will change periodically.
A magnifying glass that
takes a closer look at some of the Potomac Highlands smaller
inhabitants.
The elementary school curriculum
centers around the concept of the watershed. This curriculum introduces
students to the parts of a watershed - things like vegetation, bedrock,
and aquifers. It then teaches how the different parts of a watershed
interact.
Why worry about watersheds? In
part, because watersheds are where we live – most obviously in
mountainous terrain like West Virginia’s Potomac Highlands. Perhaps
more importantly, the watershed – rather than political boundaries -
has become the organizing concept underlying environmental assessment
and protection efforts at both the local, state and regional levels.
This is a logical approach, as most of us "live downstream"
from somebody else, and that somebody we are downstream from lives in
our watershed. For example, the Chesapeake Bay is "downstream"
from West Virginia, and efforts to protect the Chesapeake Bay from
pollution focus on pollution delivered through watersheds (like the
Potomac).
Government agencies
increasingly seek to solve problems by working with inclusive citizen's
groups known as watershed associations; as the name implies, watershed
associations consist of people living within a watershed who have a
shared interest in a clean environment.
This has created
a new and very positive way for citizens to work with and impact
government action.
Curriculum
What is a Watershed
is a simple Flash narrative with
limited student interaction about the watershed concept paced for the
elementary school level. However, based on substantial feedback,
is quite effective for middle school and even slower readers at the high
school level. The idea of using water flowing off the roof of a
shed to introduce the watershed concept was based on an experience in
the real world where CI staff was in a shed with a bunch of middle
school students talking about watersheds - and it started to rain.
Potomac Watershed Puzzle I and
II. These activities
explore the geography of watersheds, a dominant feature of West
Virginia's mountainous landscape. Level I is somewhat less complicated
than Level II, and should be appropriate for students beginning in the
third grade.
Watershed Creator
- the user builds a watershed by matching the parts of the watershed
with their functions.
The Water Cycle.
This activity, which is on the Region of
Waterloo website (in California),
has a very nice
water cycle animation that introduces the way water moves through a
watershed.
Web Scavenger Hunts
- the user visits websites from around the region to find answers to
questions about West Virginia's Potomac Highlands.
Since these activities are
interrelated, a single lesson plan is offered
here. This lesson
plan may also be downloaded as a PDF file here.
Complete question and answer
sheets for each activity are also available to teachers on
request. Please email us here
and request this information. It would be best if your return email
address is identifiable as belonging to a school employee. Otherwise,
you will be contacted by Cacapon Institute staff to ensure that you are
a teacher, and not a student, prior to receiving the requested material. |