Teach Middle East Magazine Nov-Dec 2017 Issue 2 Volume 5 | Page 10

TOP TIPS FOR ORGANISING OUTDOOR LEARNING From Dr. Katharine Forsey, Education Consultant to Gratnells, a regular contributor to its Learning Rooms project, and a specialist in devising outdoor learning activities for schoolchildren of all ages. In the October 2016 edition, we brought you a collection of ‘top tips for taking learning outdoors during the cooler months’ shared ideas around using sand dunes and wadis as outdoor classrooms and some tips for managing groups of students outdoors. Now we’re back around to the cooler seasons, we’re here again to share a few activities you could carry out in these locations and other outdoor sites. We hope they will inspire you to take your classroom outdoors and guarantee you will see a positive impact on your students in terms of engagement, learning and retention. Exploring Biodiversity Beaches and tidal streams provide a wealth of opportunities to carry out everything from simple, ecological, sampling techniques through to full scale biodiversity surveys. The equipment involved is often the same for primary and secondary school pupils and ca n be used for a variety of investigations. Top Tips Here are some tips to help you get the most out of your outdoor learning sessions:- card) that non-living or plant based finds can be stuck to and taken back to school. Draw some overlapping circles in the sand before grouping and sorting your finds using your improvised Venn diagram You could develop this into a more in-depth investigation, answering questions such as ‘do different parts of the beach have the same things in the tide line’? 1. Carry out a site pre-visit without the students and do a full risk assessment, consider if the potential hazards will change under different weather conditions 2. Conduct site pre-visits at the same time of day you intend to visit with your group 3. If you’re visiting a coastal location check the tide times 4. Group all your equipment into easy to carry cases so the students can carry everything they will need to your study site themselves. Use different coloured cases for different activities 5. Put identification guides, recording sheets, pencils or sticky strips into the cases to capture the learning 6. Make sure your students bring suitable outdoor clothing to protect them from the elements, sensible footwear and a change of clothes – don’t forget the sunscreen! 7. Bring plenty of water, outdoor learning is thirsty work! Simple exploration – take a walk along the tide line with a collecting pot and a brush or a spoon. What can you find? Is it natural or man-made? Plant or animal? This activity develops good observational, identification, grouping and sorting skills. Record your finds using a camera or a simple recording sheet tailored to the age and ability of your group or create a sticky strip (double-sided tape on a length of Beach transect – develop the simple exploration and lay out a long flexible measuring tape. Work from the shore line at 90 degrees, travelling up the beach through rock pools to cliffs, sand dunes or vegetated areas. Use a random number generator App to guide at which points along your transect line you should survey. Place a quadrat at each point to determine your sample area. Record by sketching, tally charts or taking photographs, use the data on your return to school to create pie charts of percentage area cover. Combine data from all groups using ICT to build up a full picture of the biodiversity of your survey area. What could you measure and record in addition to the plant and animal species you find? A simple data logger with the right probes could record water and sand temperature, salinity, light levels and wind speed. You could build up a great picture of the abiotic conditions that influence the biodiversity right across your site. How are the plants and animals you find adapted to these conditions? You could develop your geography skills too and survey the morphology of the land, record aspect and slope and investigate the impact on the vegetation.