Viewing entries in
School Programs

Get On The Bus - A Week in the Life

Get On The Bus - A Week in the Life

We are in an unprecedented time with countless community spaces and resources shutting down or providing limited resources due to the novel coronavirus. Perhaps the most notable of the closings in March being schools. Students of all ages have been staying home and learning with limited resources for the past 5 months.

Spark-Y partnered with the African American Community Response Team (AARCT) to bring a six week summer learning program to the third to eighth grade students of Best Academy and Friendship Academy/Freedom School. The program is called Get on the Bus (GOTB). It was held at local parks and ran Monday to Thursday from around 9am to 4pm. Buses departed to pick up students at 8:30am with breakfast running from roughly 9am to 9:30am. The Get on the Bus program provided students breakfast, lunch, and a safe way to learn and play.

Our number one priority is the safety of students and staff. As such, students were screened for symptoms of COVID-19 every day before the program as the bus picked them up from home and as they arrived at the program location. Students were expected to keep their masks on both indoors and outdoors.

Students were split into three groups and rotated between three stations: recreation, online learning, and STEM. The curriculum for the outdoor STEM station was coordinated by Spark-Y staff and run by our GOTB interns. Much like our other programs, the curriculum for GOTB is hands-on and sustainability focused. Each week had a theme: renewable energy, water, plants and growing food outside, pollinators, pests, & urban naturalists, vermicomposting & waste, and the science of COVID-19.

During the “pollinators, pests, & urban naturalists” week, the Monday activity was building simplified models of flowers and pollinators using a cup and pipe cleaners. This activity demonstrated how animals help pollen move from plant to plant and which ones are the most effective at doing so.

 
Photo Credit: Sarah Anderson

Photo Credit: Sarah Anderson

 

On Tuesday, students learned about why animals visit and pollinate flowers along with which colors different pollinators are attracted to the most. For example, butterflies are the most attracted to blue or purple flowers and bats are attracted to large, cone shaped flowers. Students were assigned a pollinator and asked to look at data to guess which flower traits their pollinator likes the best. They were then asked to choose from a set of flower pictures and decide which flower their pollinator would like the best.

 
Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

 

Students got a little dirty looking for insects on Wednesday with our bug collection activity. After a brief discussion about the habitats of insects our groups went searching for insects with butterfly nets. Each student recorded their observations about the insect’s habitat, appearance, how many legs it had, and any other characteristics they noticed. While collecting insects, one student loved the activity and told us, “When I grow up, I’m definitely going to do this job. I want to do this job!”

 
Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

 

Our final activity for the week was building bee houses for mason bees. Although mason bees do not make honey, they are pollinators who make nests in natural holes and cracks. Bee houses for mason bees are versatile. The traditional classroom bee houses are usually made of wood and cut bamboo shoots. Since using power tools at the parks is difficult, the houses were adapted and created using plastic water bottles, rolled paper bags, and string. Students were creative and used paper, sticks, and leaves to decorate the houses and blend into the natural environment. One student in particular was thrilled, “I made the bees a living room so they can hang out in the house! And this big, huge room is where they are going to have dances and parties!”

 
Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

Photo Credit: Sophia Osterberg

 

Written by Patrice Banks - Spark-Y Sustainability Educator

Learning Continues - At Home, Online, and At Your Neighborhood Drain

Learning Continues - At Home, Online, and At Your Neighborhood Drain

The following blog post was written by Cecelia Watkins, Spark-Y Curriculum Director, on our partner program with Crossroads Elementary.

On Sunday afternoon, March 15, my heart sank. I had just heard Governor Walz’s announcement that all Minnesota schools would be ordered to close in an effort to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus, starting Wednesday. I also got word that Saint Paul Public Schools wouldn’t be opening on Monday or Tuesday either; after a week of no school due to a teacher’s strike, it would be total chaos to start school back up only to have it end two days later. We never even got to say goodbye to our students.

Just like that, all our carefully laid plans went up in smoke. How could we possibly do the annual 5th grade Aquaponics Unit at Crossroads Elementary now? After weeks of letting water flow through the students’ ten gallon tanks to establish nitrification, we had been just about ready to add bluegill and goldfish to the experimental ecosystems. Now all the fish had to be evacuated since we’d no longer have access to the school building. And what would happen to all the tiny kale and tomato plants the students had been tending for weeks, ones that they’d just transplanted?

It was easy to feel robbed in those early days of the pandemic. How unfair that these 5th graders wouldn’t get to experience the springtime fish fry when we harvest the school’s tilapia for fish tacos! Crossroads students look forward to this Aquaponics unit for YEARS--when the current 5th graders were 3rd graders they were asking me when they’d get to run their own 10 gallon tanks. Now we just don’t know how we can offer them that quintessential Spark-Y experience. I have no doubt students across the country and around the world have felt the pain of being denied experiences they’d worked towards for years, from proms to graduations.

After the first few days, the sense of injustice shifted to a daunting question: How do we facilitate empowering hands-on education when schools are closed and no one’s supposed to go within 6 feet of anyone else? How can we still be of service to our community and Spark-Y youth?

Ah, the miracles of technology! Most people will tell you, I’m generally somewhat of a Luddite: opposed to excessive use of technology. I’m always asking, “Could we do this activity outside?” and “How can we get away from screens to teach this?” Well, in times like these, I’m sold: screens and a variety of technologies have been incredibly helpful in adapting to the new world of distance learning. As the past two weeks have unfolded, I’ve been impressed by how quickly my Spark-Y co-workers have demonstrated excellence in adaptation: we’ve done hours long collaborative planning sessions with our co-teachers over Zoom, fleshed out entire Google Classrooms and FlipGrids, and edited together footage using WeVideo. As we prepared for schools to resume --distance learning style-- we continuously asked ourselves: how can we go beyond kids interacting with a screen? Sure, the chromebooks and iPads that schools have sent home with students will be a fantastic way for us to connect, but when it comes down to it, we’re still Spark-Y: all about hands-on experiences. 

The trouble is, we know there’s a huge range in what supplies and supports our students have access to in their homes. Even if we make awesome student-facing activity instructions that don’t require any caregiver guidance, how do we ensure young scholars have what they need to do our hands-on projects? How do we not further widen the achievement gap during a time when that seems all but inevitable? 

We’ve come up with two solutions. One is to create what we’re calling “drop-site kits.” The idea is to package up all the supplies students would need to do a set of activities at home, and then drop the kits off at schools or community centers for student pick up. One kit could have everything students needed for a week of exploring the science behind germination, complete with seeds, test tubes, rock wool and labels. Another kit might be all about circuitry, with LED lights, breadboards and batteries included. Once the Shelter in Place order is lifted, we’re excited to explore how we can prepare drop-site kits for our school partners in a way that’s safe (I’m imagining lots of hand sanitizer) while still getting our youth the supplies they need. 

20200325_125521.jpg

Luckily, the second solution to the issue of equitable supply access we can get started on right now: developing activities that highlight what almost all of us do have access to. We’ve been writing up activities where students will be working with water, dirt, trees, leaves fallen on the ground and even what’s in the recycling bin. Did you know you could Adopt A Drain in your neighborhood or test the permeability of your sidewalk? We’re excited to send students activity instructions to invent their own water filters using entirely recycled materials, and to go on Minnesota spring Scavenger Hunts for native plants. Some days I think more could be learned just by sitting on a back porch and listening for an hour than in any YouTube video I could send my students.   

Regardless, I will still be sending videos to my Crossroads students. They will include me conducting science experiments with the 10 gallon aquaponics set up that now lives in my basement, full of the students’ plants. They will be dorky, very homemade videos. I could easily link to pre-existing YouTube videos with snazzy effects, made by a whole professional crew, but I’m hoping they’ll appreciate a familiar face.

Of course, it’s not easy. It’s downright painful that so many critical events have been cancelled and critical places closed off to us. But it’s more important than ever to remind ourselves of everything that’s not cancelled: connection to each other. Fresh air. Springtime.

20200313_125837.jpg

Fish Friends Relocation Project

Fish Friends Relocation Project

The following blog post was written by Ryland Sorensen,
Spark-Y Sustainable Systems Coordinator.

No fish were harmed in the creation of this blog.

This pandemic has brought many unprecedented outcomes and has left some people jobless, feeling vulnerable, and feeling scared. It’s important to remember our resiliency and to not give up when times get hard. We can come together and help each other, especially those who can’t help themselves. If this pandemic has taught me anything it’s that caring for other people and creatures really helps with the bad feelings that come with scary times like this.

At Spark-Y we focus on hands-on education with an emphasis on sustainability, and we use aquaponics as a learning tool. Aquaponics facilitates a symbiotic relationship between fish and plants. In simple terms, fish waste in the water feeds the plants and clean water is returned to the fish. It’s a great way to grow fresh produce all year long.

When you heard that schools were closing you probably didn’t consider all the classroom pets that might be affected. Who will feed all the classroom turtles, guinea pigs, and fish? Their human friends won’t be around to feed them or keep them company. Luckily for them they have a place to go, and some lucky people will have a new friend to care for and to take their minds off things during this time of uncertainty. When I found out that the fish might be locked in schools without anyone to take care of them I knew I had to move quickly.

PaintedTurtle.png

Working for an organization that uses fish as a learning tool is great, you feed the fish, you talk to the fish, and they become your little buddies. I think about them a lot. I wonder about things like, do they like their food? Are they being bullied by the bigger fish? I never thought one day I would be scrambling around the Twin Cities and beyond to try and rescue fish from being stuck in schools due to a virus.

Mini aquaponics systems at Crossroads Elementary.

Mini aquaponics systems at Crossroads Elementary.

On Monday morning rules for school closings were changing by the hour. There was talk of schools closing and it was unknown whether we would have access to take care of the fish. Luckily, Edison High School allowed Spark-Y to use the garage to relocate fish from other schools. Other schools were understandably very strict and we were told we would have to move our fish by the end of the day Tuesday or risk fish death. Schools are expected to remain closed for 3 weeks and possibly longer. We had to act fast to collect about 100 fish from seven different schools in less than two days.

Edison High School aqauponics system

Edison High School aqauponics system

I reached out to everyone who needed help relocating. Our goal was to save the fish! We not only needed to make sure they ended up in safe temporary homes, but also save as many plants as we could and to make sure that our systems were put on pause and ready to be put back to work when the coast was clear. That evening we collected all the buckets and supplies needed to relocate all the fish. Everyone was ready for the big move.

Listening to NPR on the way to the schools Tuesday morning set a tone of doom and gloom despite the sunny weather. Our first stop was Roosevelt High School where we needed to move the 15 koi to Edison. This is just one story out of many fish that had their lives totally rearranged that day.

20200317_111328 (1).jpg

Every school I arrived at had a similar atmosphere. Students and parents were lining up to take home lunches and school supplies. With buckets in hand, I walked past happy students and concerned parents. Staff cautiously waved me along and the custodians waved goodbye to the fish.

I used a net to carefully put the fish in their travel buckets and hauled them to my truck.

The fish were buckled up and rushed to join the rest of their relocated fish friends. On the way there one feisty bluegill jumped out of the bucket and onto the car seat. I pulled over on the side of the highway and quickly grabbed the flopping fish and put them back in the bucket. *phew*

Leaving the systems behind was a bit dreary. Pumps, filters and aerators were unplugged and the buzz of the filters ceased. The drips and dribbles of water that liven the otherwise quiet corners of the schools slowly faded. When I got back to Edison the garage had been transformed into an aquarium, bustling with the sounds of splashing water and the humm of the pumps. It was a happy moment on a gloomy day. I was very proud to see that all my co-workers were working really hard to save all the fish and to make sure they had everything they needed to get through the transition. I can’t wait to return the fish back to their homes and to see all the lovely people we work with again.

Don’t forget to be nice to each other.