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Post-Visit
Activities : Helping Watersheds : Resources
Sixth - Eighth Grade Online Curriculum : Watersheds |
Teacher
Reference Books Carson, Rachel. Silent
Spring, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1993. Duany, Andres, Elizabeth
Plater-Zyberk and Jeff Speck. Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the
Decline of the American Dream, North Point Press, New York, 2000. Leopold, Aldo. A Sand
County Almanac, Oxford University Press, New York, 1949. Ricklefs, Robert E. and
Gary L. Miller. Ecology, W.H. Freeman Company, 1999. Southern Appalachian
Watershed Conservation Clearinghouse South Carolina DHEC Bureau
of Water United States Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) Surf Your Watershed Top Cone, Molly. Come Back,
Salmon, Sierra Club Books for Children, San Francisco, 1992. Herda, D.J. Environmental
America: The Southeastern States, The Millbrook Press, Brookfield, CT, 1991. Liptak, Karen. Saving
Our Wetlands and Their Wildlife, Franklin Watts, New York, 1991. Mattson, Mark. Scholastic
Environmental Atlas of the United States, Scholastic Inc., 1993. McVey, Vicki. The Sierra
Club Kid's Guide to Planet Care & Repair, Sierra Club Books for Children,
San Francisco, 1993. Student
Fiction Books Cherry, Lynne. The Great
Kapok Tree, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, 1990. Cherry, Lynne. A River
Ran Wild, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, 1992. Jeffers, Susan. Brother
Eagle, Sister Sky: A Message From Chief Seattle, Dial Books, New York, 1991. Curricula For more information click
on: The GLOBE Program Either before, after, or
in place of a visit to the South Carolina Aquarium, we encourage teachers using
the South Carolina Aquarium's sixth through eighth grade curriculum to visit
a local stream, pond or river to conduct water analysis experiments. You can
find detailed water analysis procedures on the GLOBE website. From the home
page, visit the measurements section and then proceed to hydrology. Project WILD For more information click
on: SCMAPS: For more information click
on: Project WET For more information click
on: Field
Trip Sites Mountain Bridge Wilderness
Area (Jones Gap and Caesars Head State Natural Area) Table Rock State Park Congaree Swamp National
Monument Francis Biedler Forest ACE Basin National Estuarine
Research Reserve St. Stephen Fish Lift/
Jack Bayless Hatchery Savannah District Lakes If you are aware of other
books, videos, websites, curricula, fieldtrip destinations or other materials
that would make excellent resources for this activity, please e-mail them to
us for inclusion in this list at: Education@scaquarium.org
Audubon magazine, published by the National Audubon Society.
This bi-monthly magazine has articles on wildlife all over the world and the
conservation issues affecting them.
This book, first published in 1962, was a powerful look at how pesticides have
affected the natural world. It led to the banning of DDT and helped start the
environmental movement.
A look at the issues around and consequences of America's current system of
urban development.
This classic of nature writing was one of the first texts to examine the ethical
reasons of why humans need to preserve wild places.
This college textbook is a great resource for finding out how wildlife communities
interact with each other as well as the abiotic factors of their environment,
and what human influences can be on these communities.
Chesapeake Bay Foundation Environmental Education
http://www.cbf.org/education/index.htm
The Chesapeake Bay Foundation has put together an exemplary watershed protection
program that encompasses many states. This site includes information on what they
have done in this program as well as curricula and other education related items.
http://sunsite.utk.edu/samab/proj/watershed.html
This site offers links to a number of websites related to watershed conservation
in the Southeastern United States.
http://www.scdhec.net/water/
This website offers lots of information on watersheds in South Carolina
including information on education and outreach programs.
http://www.epa.gov/surf/
This EPA website is a wonderful resource that includes maps and interactives
that can be used for a better understanding of watersheds and the conservation
issues related to them.
Student Reference Books
Bruning, Nancy. Cities Against Nature, Childrens Press, Chicago,
1992.
A student's look at how urban development affects wildlife communities.
Learn how the students
of Jackson Elementary School in Everett, Washington, cleaned a nearby
stream, stocked it with salmon and protected it from pollution.
A student's look at the environmental issues affecting the Southeastern United
States.
This book describes the different types of wetlands and the wildlife found there.
It also includes ideas
for protecting the wetland habitats.
This excellent reference book is filled with maps and charts that help kids
to understand different aspects of environmental issues such as overpopulation
and waste disposal.
Learn how activities we do everyday affect the environment. Includes tips for
improving our environment as well as classroom activities for students.
(These books may be
too elementary for middle school students, but they are beautiful books that
can be appreciated by everybody)
A man getting ready to chop down a tree in the Amazon rainforest falls asleep
and is visited by many different members of the rainforest wildlife community
who tell him why they do not want the tree to be cut down.
A beautifully illustrated story of how a river in New England has changed during
the last 400 years as more people moved to live on its banks.
A beautifully illustrated book of the ecological message of Chief Seattle, an
Indian chief who lived in the Pacific Northwest from 1790 to 1866.
Aquatic Project
WILD
Aquatic Project WILD is an interdisciplinary curriculum for K-12 teachers
on aquatic wildlife and ecosystems. The activities cover a broad range of environmental
and conservation topics. For information on signing up for workshops, call the
South Carolina Department of Natural Resources at (803) 734-3814.
www.dnr.state.sc.us/cec/educate/edu1.html#teacher
Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment (GLOBE) is a
hands-on international environmental science and education program. GLOBE links
students, teachers, and the scientific research community in an effort to learn
more about the environment through student data collection and observation.
To learn more about the GLOBE program visit their website at www.globe.gov.
Project WILD is an interdisciplinary curriculum for K-12 teachers on a broad
range of environmental and conservation topics. For information on signing up
for workshops, call the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources at (803)
734-3814.
www.dnr.state.sc.us/cec/educate/edu1.html#teacher
SCMAPS is an integrated curriculum for grades 6-8 that uses maps and aerial
photography to focus on the natural and cultural history as well as the geology
and geography of South Carolina. It is filled with useful classroom activities,
many of which deal specifically with watersheds. For information on signing
up for a SCMAPS workshop call the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources
(803) 734-3814.
www.dnr.state.sc.us/cec/educate/edu1.html#teacher
Project WET is an interdisciplinary curriculum for K-12 teachers that focuses
on water, waterways and watersheds. For information on signing up for workshops,
call the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources at (803) 737-0800.
www.dnr.state.sc.us/cec/educate/edu1.html#teacher
Lee State Natural Area
This site, located near Florence, allows students to explore the Lynches
River and its associated hardwood floodplain forest. Education programs offered
there focus on understanding and stewardship of watersheds. For more information
call (803) 428-5307 or click on www.southcarolinaparks.com/.
This natural area, located in the Northwest corner of South Carolina, joins
the watersheds of Table Rock Reservoir and Poinsett Reservoir. It contains two
state parks and three Heritage Preserves and a diversity of mountain habitats.
Both state parks offer education programs that explore the ecology, hydrology
and geology of the area. For more information call Caesars Head State Park at
(864) 836-6115 or Jones Gap State Park at (864) 836-3647 or click on www.southcarolinaparks.com/.
Located in the Northwest corner of the state, this park includes some of
South Carolina's most spectacular scenery. Part of the Blue Ridge Mountains,
this park gives students an opportunity to see the waterfalls, elevation changes
and other features that are characteristic of a mountain landscape. Education
programs are offered there that promote awareness and appreciation of the surrounding
watershed and its associated natural resources. For more information call (864)
878-9813 or (864) 878-7269 or click on www.southcarolinaparks.com/.
Located just outside of Columbia, this is an area of old-growth riverbottom
hardwood forest that is protected by the National Park Service. Its blackwater
and brownwater swamps are very indicative of the habitats found in the Coastal
Plain of South Carolina. These swamps, formed with water brought from the Piedmont,
can be used to illustrate the interconnectedness of aquatic habitats in a watershed.
The Monument has developed a curriculum and offers environmental education programs
for visiting school groups. For more information call (803) 776-4396 or click
on www.nps.gov/cosw/.
Located near Harleyville, Francis Biedler Forest is the last remaining
stand of virgin bald cypress trees and tupelo gum in the world. It gives students
the opportunity to see a pristine blackwater swamp habitat that is a part of
the Edisto River watershed. The forest is open to the public Tuesday through
Sunday and offers interpretive environmental education programs. For more information
call (843) 462-2150 or click on www.pride-net.com/swamp/.
This reserve, located between Edisto Beach and Hunting Island, contains
12,000 acres of tidal marshes and estuarine waters. The area is rich in wildlife:
fish, crustaceans, birds and even mammals can all be found here. Boat tours
are available through this area for high school and college students allowing
them to tour some of the watersheds of the Ashepoo, Combahee and Edisto Rivers.
For more information call (843) 762-5032.
This is a good place to see the some of the changes man has made on watersheds.
Located near St. Stephens, this fish lift allows anadramous fish (the fish
that migrate into freshwater rivers to spawn) to bypass the lake Marion and
Moultrie dams that block their way. A fish hatchery is also here where striped
bass, white bass and hybrids are produced for stocking the lakes of South Carolina.
The fish lift operates from about March 15 to April 15 and school groups are
welcome. For more information or to arrange a group tour call (843) 825-3387.
Located in the upstate on the Savannah River, these man-made lakes include
Hartwell, Russell and Thurmond. Around 130 parks and recreation areas can be
found around these lakes. They are a good place to look at the reservoirs that
have made major alterations in South Carolina's watersheds. For information
on bringing school groups to these lakes call 1-888-893-0678 for Hartwell, 1-800-944-7207
for Russell, and 1-800-533-3478 for Thurmond.