One of our most exciting
workshops presented during our time in Liberia centered around the wetlands. Liberia has five wetlands recognized by the
Liberian government. The Liberian
Environmental Protection Agency is working to get these wetlands protected, but
with economic and health issues at the forefront of building the nation up, the
environment often gets ignored. Most
Liberians are in a day to day struggle to put food on the table for their
families and do not know the important role the wetlands play in providing
sustainable protein in their diets in the form of fish.
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Teachers Testing the Water |
Kristy, Jooyoung and
Jenny collaborated on the project teaching methods designed to engage learners
and bring thinking to a higher level. We
invited secondary Biology, Chemistry, Geography and English teachers and many
attended the seven sessions.
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Peter Fahn
Journalist/Environmentalist |
On the first day a
Liberian journalist, Peter Fahn, came to speak to our teachers on the Liberian
wetlands and their importance for food and clean water.
Then for three days
Kristy, Jooyoung and Jenny presented the teachers with strategies such as KWLA,
graphic organizers and questions stems.
They would teach the strategy and then use it as it pertained the
teachers’ subject matter. Learning then
focused on planning lessons on the wetlands for Liberian students. On the 4th and 5th day
students came to participate in the project.
The Liberian teachers got to practice their new strategies and taught
the students about wetlands and the connections that wetlands have to their
lives.
On Wednesday afternoon
the students took all their learning and held a Wetlands Festival for the
community. The students presented songs,
drawings, dramas, wetland tours, community clean ups and water testing for the
community. The most surprising event was
when the results came back on the water testing showing e coli and other
bacteria in the neighborhood estuary.
On the last day the
teachers spent the day reflecting on their experience and planning lessons for
the upcoming year. Many of the teachers
and students say that they are looking at their environment in a new way and
will continue to learn more about it and find ways to protect it.
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