Hands-On Is Best Way to Learn About Nature

By Stan Friedman

SCOTTS VALLEY, CA (May 10, 2012) – The 150 fifth graders from the Oakland Public School District exited the buses that had taken them to Mission Springs Camp and Conference Center recently and saw something they had only read about in books or seen on television – trees all around them. Giant redwoods at that.

They were in awe. “They are just struck by the beauty,” says Jeremy Geels, director of the Mission Springs Outdoor Education (MSOE) program. Click here to see more photos.

The group was the latest to participate in MSOE, which gives students the opportunity to study nature in ways that would not otherwise be available to them. Naturalists guide the students’ learning during the three-day experience.

The camp hosts 3,500 students from Christian and public schools throughout the year, says Geels. Last week’s trip was part of a partnership with Science Horizons, a project of the Faith Network of the East Bay.

Randy Roth, former pastor of First Covenant Church in Oakland, started the Faith Network organization in 2001. The network is a collaboration of organizations, congregations, businesses, educators, and other individuals who invest time and other resources to improve the whole health of children and families.

The Mission Springs experience is a centerpiece of Science Horizons, Roth says.

Through the cooperative work of Science Horizons and Mission Springs, the students engage in activities that relate to California State Science Standards for life, earth, and environmental science. The curriculum begins with pre-camp classroom lessons and ends with a follow-up lesson in which the students choose an environmental project to showcase what they have learned.

Among the activities, students do a stream study, taking water samples to test for PH and turbidity, while also looking for invertebrates, which they collect and later examine under a video microscope. The animals they find will help them determine the health of the stream.

The campers also try their hands on the climbing wall and enjoy campfires. On the last day, the students are taken to the wharf in Santa Cruz, where they learn about marine mammals such as the sea lions that often are present. They also dissect squid.

The students complete several hikes together, including one at night. During that hike, they do a brief individual hike in the dark without a flashlight. Sometimes the moonlight illuminates their way, but the assistance isn’t always available.

“It’s like 30 seconds,” says Geels. A naturalist escorts the students to a spot on the trail and then asks them to find their way back. “It helps them to overcome their fear of the night,” he adds.

The program has demonstrated other benefits, as well. According to Faith Network, students who participate in the program tend to score higher on the California standardized test. The test was given this week.

Geels says that teachers demonstrate their belief in the value of the outdoor education by bringing the students a week before the test rather than spending all of that time preparing them more broadly for the exam.

The outdoor education experience is not just about helping them pass the standardized test. “It opens the kids to the sheer joy of wonder,” observes Bryan Hayes, Missions Springs executive director.

Picture of The Covenant Companion

The Covenant Companion

The Covenant Companion brings together stories and voices that connect, inform, and inspire. Subscribe to our print edition.
CONTINUE READING

Explore More Stories & News

Features

The Priesthood of All Believers

From Pentecost to the present, the whole church — ordained and lay alike — carries the mission forward.

Features

A Story of God’s Pursuing Love: Nicki’s Journey at Rock Harbor

After a devastating job loss, Nicki Andersen made God a promise: she’d read the Bible from cover to cover. What followed was a conversion, a baptism, and a community at Rock Harbor Church that would expand to embrace her granddaughter too, in the midst of her most difficult moments.

Features

The Joy of Choosing Broccoli

Intellectual agreement isn’t the same as living it out. Through honest stories of allyship and real advocacy in ministry, Jessica explores what women and men must do to build teams where everyone truly flourishes and grows stronger together.

Features

Jochebed: Lessons My Mother Taught Me

Julie Bromley traces a line from Moses’s mother, Jochebed, whose very name carried the glory of God, to her own mother, a Sunday school teacher and lifelong Bible student who taught her to ask hard questions and know who she belongs to.

Features

The Kitchen Where Work Is Prayer

How Covenant pastor and church planter Alex Song went from addiction and a Korean monastery to opening a community kitchen in Windsor, Ontario, where they feed neighbors, train teenagers, and create spaces of belonging.