Remote Cameras in Environmental Education
28 Lennox St
43.6638493
-79.41118879999999
Description
Young people do not realize there are so many interesting things that they can learn about animals in their own schoolyard and neighborhood. Using remote cameras helps teachers to increase technology learning in their classrooms and brings students outside to create meaningful connections. Whether you think small scale at what your students will learn about the animals that share their space when they are absent or you choose to connect with local scientists, setting up trail cameras will give you a window into the wild. Join Ryan and Dawn in discussion as they address choosing the best locations to place the cameras, how to set them up and what can be done both inside and outside of the classroom with the resulting images and data. Ryan Pennesi is a Mentor Naturalist at the Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center in Finland, Minnesota. After studying wildlife conservation at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, he worked as a crew leader with the Vermont Youth Conservation Corps and as an environmental educator with the Student Conservation Association in Western Massachusetts. Dawn Tanner teaches field and international courses on conservation techniques at the University of Minnesota. As part of her dissertation work in conservation biology, she collaborated with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (MN Project WILD), Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve, Afton-Lakeland Elementary, and Afton State Park to teach with remote cameras and create the Taking Action Opportunities (TAO) curriculum (http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/projectwild/tao/index.html)
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Start:
2016-02-10T19:30:00-05:00
End:
2016-02-10T20:30:00-05:00
Category
Other
Tickets
Free Registration
0.0
CAD
300
Registration with Continuing Education Certificate
5.25
CAD
100