Michelle Cusolito: Two Ways of Seeing Trees
From: Polliwog on Safari
http://michellecusolito.blogspot.com/2012/05/two-ways-of-seeing-trees.html
May 29, 2012 at 08:00AM
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| Balsam Fir |
Outside it was a cool, sunny, perfect morning, but for the
moment my students and I were inside the classroom. They’d come to the nature
center where I work on a field trip, and my job was to teach them about identifying
local tree species. Before we looked at the trees themselves, they had to
understand the tool we’d be using, a dichotomous key.
of the key. A written dichotomous key consists of pairs of mutually exclusive
statements to describe the object you’re trying to identify. You pick the
statement that describes your object, and the key directs you to the next pair
of descriptions to narrow it down further, until finally you arrive at your identification. To practice I had the kids each take
off one of their shoes and put them in a pile at the front of the room, and we
wrote a key to determine who each shoe belonged to. It went something like
this:
Shoe is a right shoe… go to number 3
Shoe has white laces… go to number 4
understand all the words in the tree key – coniferous vs. deciduous trees,
alternate vs. opposite branching, simple vs. compound leaves, etc. Finally we
were ready to go outside and put their new skills to the test.
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| Paper Birch |
This is my favorite kind of lesson to teach, where the
students immediately get to apply their new knowledge in an authentic way.
Ecologists use dichotomous keys in their field work all the time, and here was
my group of middle schoolers doing the same thing. Each one had to identify
three different tree species and record what species he/she found in his/her
field notebook, along with sketches or descriptions explaining the
characteristics used to identify each one. If you want to try a dichotomous key
for yourself, a great interactive one for the trees of Wisconsin, where I live,
can be found at (EEK!) Environmental Education for Kids; with a little Googling you might find
something similar for the region where you live.
that being able to identify and name your plant and animal neighbors is a
useful skill. It strengthens your sense of connection to the place where you
live and gives you greater awareness and appreciation of the diverse natural
community of which you’re a part. However, I also know that names and facts
aren’t the only way to get to know trees, which is why we ended the lesson with
a very different activity. I had the students pair up and distributed a
blindfold to each pair. The “seeing” partner chose a tree and carefully led the
“blind” partner to it, and the blind partner had to use his or her non-visual
senses (mostly touch) to get to know that individual tree. When the seeing
students led their partners away again, spun them around to disorient them, and
removed their blindfolds, they had to re-find the same tree based on their
observations while blind.
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| Yellow Birch |
The students took copies of the tree
key home with them at the end of their field trip. I hope they keep them and
pull them out to identify the trees in their backyards. I hope they take the
time to hug those trees once in a while, too. And I really, really hope that even
when they grow up, they see the trees in their lives as something more than a
nice green backdrop to more important things.
Deatsman is a graduate student in environmental education at the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point. She blogs about the natural history of northern
Wisconsin at Rebecca in the Woods and is on Twitter as @rdeatsman.
Posted on May 29, 2012, in Michelle Cusolito. Bookmark the permalink. Comments Off.


