The Potomac Highlands Watershed School High School Environmental Forum General Information and Sign-up |
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“This was great! This was the hardest school work that I have done in my whole life.” 2005 Student Participant
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Forum (fo-rum) n. pl. -rums or -ra An assembly, meeting place, program, etc. for the discussion of questions of public interest. What is the Environmental Forum?
There are two eForums:
In the eForums, students:
Who can take part:
Where do I find the Forum? There is only one way to get into the current forum, by clicking on the telephone in the High School classroom. |
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Why participate in the "Oh Deer!" eForum?
An ecosystem out of balance can be a recipe for disaster. In Oh Deer!, students explore the environmental and societal problems caused by deer overpopulation. It's not a small problem; deer are one of the biggest threats to forest health in the Northeast, they cause many millions of dollars in damage to agricultural interests every year, and deer-automobile collisions cause many injuries (human and deer) and millions in insurance payouts. It's not a simple problem to solve either, with competing economic and societal interests on the many "sides" of this issue. As the students learn from a New York Times editorial excerpted in the Forum, it's also not the deer's fault:
The student's challenge is to seek solutions that might really fix the problem and that their community could find acceptable. They learn about:
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Why participate in the Stream Cleaner eForum? The Chesapeake Bay is a national treasure but, after years of pollution, it is in trouble. Each spring, high school classes across the Chesapeake Bay watershed can participate in a region-wide dialogue about the Chesapeake Bay watershed's problems and propose their solutions to reduce non-point source pollution. For three weeks students join classmates and students from other schools in exploring one of the most complex environmental problems ever to confront the United States - saving the Chesapeake Bay from decades of pollution. Students learn about:
If that sounds like a lot of information to digest, it is. We strongly encourage teachers to incorporate SCE Forum content into their lessons well before Part 2 of the Forum begins in mid-March. As the SCE Forum fits so well with concepts teachers are required to teach anyway, this is not difficult to do. Lesson plans and links to relevant educational standards are provided here.
Participating schools will have a chance to receive technical and financial support to design and implement their own real-world best management practice projects as demonstrations of watershed stewardship and as long-term living classrooms.
Each classes' challenge is to propose a solution that really cleans their waters and that their community would find acceptable.
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Current and Archived Forums There is only one way to get into the current forum, by clicking on the telephone in the High School classroom. If you want to take a look at past eForums, go to the forum archives here. Archived forums for the active eForum topic are hidden beginning one week before Part 2, the multi-school dialogue phase, begins. |
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For Teachers “This was great! This was the hardest school work that I have done in my whole life.” 2005 Student Participant We have done our best to include everything a class will need to make the eForum activity both self contained and self explanatory (please tell us if this is not the case). All the information required for students to participate is included on the eForum web-pages, and many links and threads of thought are offered to lead students to self discovery. Additional information helpful for teachers to plan their use of this activity in the classroom is included in the High School lesson plans located in the Teacher's Room and also directly from this link. We have a teacher suggestion page (follow Teacher's Room link and click on the phone) for your comments on how to enrich the students' experience, accommodate teacher's needs, and better align the eForum with educational content standards. Use the High School link (at left) and then click on the phone, to review the current/upcoming eForum, and archived eForums that include past students' work. The eForum Highlights link offers a few of our favorite moments from past forums (we really enjoy doing this!). Current and future eForum pages have all the background reading, links, and information required for Part 1 of either forum to take place at your convenience. However, the student submissions will not be accepted until the current eForum dialogue is officially underway (Part 2). We encourage classes to become familiar with the content and web site prior to the opening date. The three or four weeks of web-based dialogue between schools should be the culmination of your program. Who can participate? Any high school in the Chesapeake Bay watershed with an internet connection and enough computers for their students to use can participate. (This activity is limited to high schools because of the higher level thinking skills required.) Many educational disciplines could find a solid reason to participate, but those below are a clear match:
We would love to see classes within a school from multiple disciplines take part in the eForum at the same time, and can easily imagine the final consensus phase occurring in the school auditorium with hundreds of students in attendance. We encourage you to think big about how the eForum might be implemented in your school. Classes are invited to go beyond the web-based boundaries of the Forums to initiate their own science projects in what we call living laboratories. One example is the Hampshire High School’s experience where participation in the Oh Deer! Forum led to obtain a small grant for a small deer “exclosure” on the school property. It is being used as a living laboratory to study the impacts of deer browsing on forest health. The U.S. Forest Service research team in Parsons, WV happened to be following the 2005 Oh Deer! Forum, and their interest in the students' work led to a $3,800 grant for Hampshire High to establish a larger research area. The U.S. Forest Service continues to work with the students in a cooperative research project.
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What is needed to participate in the on-line program? We have created the eForum to be as flexible as possible, and accommodate many teaching styles. Because the eForum, and the rest of the Potomac Highlands Watershed School's web site, are always available on the web, it's always available for your use. However, there are certain minimum requirements for a class to take part in the eForum:
Since the background reading material and links are available at any time, it is possible for individual classes to do the activity totally within their classrooms, develop their stakeholder POVs, TQs, and consensus exercises, and never talk to another school. Frankly, however, this activity really soars when students begin challenging their peers across the web. We strongly encourage teachers to schedule this activity so their students can participate in the internet dialogue (Part 2). If you decide to do it "solo" we would still like to hear how it turned out.
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Why should teachers participate? CI’s Environmental Forums (eForums) are highly relevant to educational content requirements in science, social studies, vocational agriculture, and other disciplines. There are many reasons for teachers to participate in Cacapon Institute’s eForums, beginning with what participating teachers themselves say: “I was shocked and amazed to observe the strong stances that many of my students took on their points of views…The most rewarding experience for me was the students’ response at the end of consensus work. All the students leaned back in their chairs and collapsed with a sense of satisfied accomplishment.” Sharon Harman, Ph.D., Petersburg H.S., West Virginia
“I love the forums. They are teaching me to do what I wanted to but did not understand how. Now I do. What a wonderful format to teach the students. . . . It makes group work more meaningful as stakeholders in a real problem. Sounds official to the students - which it is - and makes them much more willing to work for a solution. Controversial topics are a fact of life and necessary to address in our classrooms. With your forum the students need to come to a consensus for a large, real controversial topic twice - as a small group and as a large group. They get to see a BIG picture to a for-real BIG problem. Then they get to see what solution others propose. That is the best piece of it. They know how they fit in/measure up in our school. With the forum, they can fit into a larger piece - be exposed to ideas and biases from other areas/classrooms. So it also lets each school class involved see that everyone is learning the same skills - their school is not better or worse but trying to get essential skills across in a way that is meaningful, usable, and "learnable". It has also taught me a respect for the ability of many of my students to see the big picture and to express it concisely. I have been delighted all way round with your wonderful, usable concept of small to large and real problems for real learning.” Susan Settle, Rappahannock High School, Virginia.
The eForums are an example of Project Based Learning, where students focus on a complex problem and then seek a solution through a collaborative process over an extended period of time. Documented benefits of the Project Based Learning (PBL) approach include:
(Click here for more background on PBL.) eForums provide an opportunity for high school teachers to challenge their students to explore complex problems that are relevant to students’ lives. Students gather information and develop answers that solve a problem while respecting the needs of diverse communities. Because the eForums are web-based, the process extends beyond the classroom walls as students collaborate with and challenge their peers to create a community of learning and problem solving across the internet. The collaborative process also includes guidance from real life experts who work in fields directly related to the eForum’s topic. These "Native Guides" offer their personal perspective to the students in essays drafted specifically for the eForum. The West Virginia Department of Education has made a commitment to PBL to enable students to develop 21st Century Skills. Schools in D.C., MD, PA, and VA require that all students participate in a form of PBL called a Meaningful Watershed Educational Experience (MWEE). MWEE requires a hands-on restoration project or community outreach campaign in addition to the in-class PBL lesson. When coupled with a hands-on activity, CI’s eForums offer a ready made approach to MWEE lessons. Cacapon Institute will help schools secure material and technical guidance for hands-on MWEE projects. To learn more about MWEE click here.
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For Watershed or Environmental Associations
Watershed leaders and environmentalists should reach out to students to teach stewardship. Adult mentors lend a real-world sense of importance to classroom learning." Laura O'Leary, North Harford H.S., MD
We encourage interested parties to recruit classes and act as mentors on the importance of good stewardship.
The Environmental Forum provides an opportunity for tributary teams, watershed groups, and environmental "clubs" of all kinds to engage their local schools in the challenge of solving environmental problems that relate to their mission. The Forum provides a structure for students to roll-play as citizens addressing the social and scientific realities of real life environmental problems that are relevant in their lives. Stake holder identification and consensus building are at the heart of the solution to many problems.
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