CBF-PA: 16 Student Groups In 6 Counties To Participate In Fall Susquehanna Watershed Environmental Education Program
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The Chesapeake Bay Foundation-PA Tuesday announced 16 student groups from 6 Pennsylvania counties in grades 6 through 12 will participate in the Fall Susquehanna Watershed Environmental Education Program. Participating student groups come from Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Lycoming, Union and York counties.. SWEEP, one of CBF’s field education programs, has been providing hands-on experiential learning programs in Pennsylvania for 28 years. This fall, CBF-PA education staff will get students out on and in a local river or stream doing what they do best – teaching students about the importance of water quality, how stream systems work, and conducting hands-on experiments that engage and excite a student’s sense of exploration. SWEEP will guide students through a series of water quality programs designed to reinforce in-class lessons and to emphasize the importance of clean water and enjoy the opportunity to paddle a canoe. Students will investigate the health of local waterways through a variety of hands-on activities like up-close studies of the bugs and other species living in the waterway; studying the physical characteristics of the waterway, the shoreline, and the adjoining lands; using water chemistry tests to determine quality; and by using maps to orient students with their specific watershed. The purpose of the program is to provide field experiences that help students build a critical connection to the natural world in which they live that will motivate their decision-making as they develop into citizens and future leaders in Pennsylvania. The programs will run from September 10 to November 9. Click Here for a copy of the schedule and other background. For more info or if media is interested in scheduling time on the water with students and CBF's SWEEP team, contact B.J. Small, PA Media and Communications Coordinator, by calling 717-200-4521, or send email to: bsmall@cbf.org. Visit the Susquehanna Watershed Environmental Education Program webpage for information on how to sign up for future events. For more on Chesapeake Bay-related issues in Pennsylvania, visit the Chesapeake Bay Foundation-PA webpage. Click Here to sign up for Pennsylvania updates (bottom of left column). Click Here to support their work. NewsClips: DCNR PA Outdoor Corps Program Links Young Adults To The Outdoors Lycoming College Field Station Expands College Stream Biology Research Efforts Dickinson Environmental Science Major Helps Restore Oyster Population In Chesapeake Bay Millersville Students: Swarming Mayflies May Be Fertilizer, Human Food Source Shaver’s Creek Environmental Ed Center To Reopen Saturday After Renovations Shaver’s Creek Environmental Ed Center Reopens Duquesne Among 3 PA Universities To Launch STEM Fellowship Program Related Stories: Delaware River Watershed Initiative: Clean Water, Healthy Fish, Happy Kids In Chester County Stroud Water Research Center: Get Slimed, Good Fences-Good Water, Educating Stewards Of Tomorrow DEP Teaching Green: Environmental Ed Grant Success Stories Agriculture Officials Visit Wilson College's Organic Fulton Farm, Center For Sustainability Studies Chesapeake Bay Program Releases Best Management Practice Guide Woodland Stewardship Network Connects Neighbors And Forested Landscape In PA Lancaster County Graziers Group To Host Founder Of Savory Institute Sept. 19 Bay Journal Op-Ed: Turkey Hill Clean Water Partnership Leads The Way In Lancaster County Allegheny Mountain Woodland Assn. Stream Buffer Workshop Sept. 15, Cambria County Sun-Gazette: Lycoming College Field Station Expands College Stream Biology Research Efforts PA Chesapeake Bay Planning Steering Committee Meets Sept. 10 On Outreach, Engagement Add Your Name To Petition Urging House To Name The Hellbender Official State Amphibian Pike Conservation District: Proactive Stormwater Management How You Can Help Want To Find A Watershed Group Near You? Try The PA Land Trust Assn. Watershed Association Finder Take Action How Good Is The Water Quality In Streams In Your Community? Take A Look, Then Act [Posted: Sept. 4, 2018] |
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9/10/2018 |
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