1 / 12

Dipping Into Our Vernal Pool

Dipping Into Our Vernal Pool. Or … Exploring “ Wicked Big Puddles ”. AIM Participants:. Jennifer Jendzejec-third grade teacher; clinical instructor-Washington Oak School Greg Kniseley-professor; course instructor-Rhode Island College

jam
Download Presentation

Dipping Into Our Vernal Pool

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dipping Into Our Vernal Pool Or… Exploring “Wicked Big Puddles”

  2. AIM Participants: • Jennifer Jendzejec-third grade teacher; clinical instructor-Washington Oak School • Greg Kniseley-professor; course instructor-Rhode Island College • Deborah Kolling-third grade teacher; clinical instructor-Washington Oak School

  3. Research Questions: • Exactly what is the “wicked big puddle” on our playground? • Is it safe? • Should we protect it? • Are there more of these puddles? Where?

  4. Background: In the past, students have questioned the fact that they’re not able to play on a large section of the playground. The reason provided: a large pool of water forms in that area at various times of the year and students are to avoid it.

  5. Hypothesis: • The standing body of water on our playground is not a pond, but a vernal pool. Why? • *It is an open body of water smaller than ¼ acre in size. • *It holds water for less than six months a year. • *It is capable of supporting and providing habitat for aquatic lifeforms. *RI Fresh Water Wetlands Act

  6. Standards • Science Grade Level Expectations • Reading/Language Arts GLEs • Math GLEs

  7. Possible Types for Data • Digital photographs of the pool over time • Location of the pool (GPS)

  8. Pool Characteristics • o Length, width, area, average depth, and approximate volume • o pH • o water color • o dissolved oxygen content • o water temperature • o pool bottom type (peat, leaf litter, mud, sand, gravel, cobbles, bedrock) • o presence of inlet and/or outlet to the pool

  9. Habitat Conditions • o Distance to nearest: road, building, lawn, woods • o Tree canopy cover over pool (percent) • o Vegetation types within pool (percent) • o Vegetation types within 100 feet of pool (percent) • o Pool type: woods depression, open field, drainage system, quarry or rocky area, swamp, coastal pond, bog, impoundment, man-made dug pool, other • o General description of pool • o Presence of inlet and/or outlet to pool

  10. Biological Conditions • o Observe vernal pool organisms over time and seasons • o Observe and photograph animal behaviors over time and seasons vernal pool animals observed. • o Monitor populations of species

  11. Data Transformation • Charts, tables, graphs, maps • Digital images • Sequencing photos over seasons • GPS/Google maps of the perimeter of the pool over time

  12. Camera Usage • Digital photographs of pool over time • Animated GIF • Digital photographs of organisms • Power Point presentation to community • Students utilizing cameras to capture evidence during investigations (FOSS Water Kit) • Photograph students engaged in hands on activities for assessment and reflection

More Related