Monday, October 28, 2013

Day 45, Jennifer Moody, 4th Grade Parent

Fourth Grade Field Trip to the K.I.S.D Outdoor Learning Center!(A Mom’s Point of View)


Laureli, a 4th grader, holding a  5’ long corn snake   



Last Monday I joined Ms. Blum and Mr. Sumner’s fourth grade classes on their field trip to the Katy I.S.D Outdoor Learning Center. With 24 years of parenting under my belt, I have been on my fair share of field trips. It didn’t take long, however, to realize this one was going to be different.

Several parents accompanied the classes, but rather than strolling through the field trip as quiet observers, Mr. Sumner assigned each parent a group of kids and put us right to work. We started out in the history building, where the kids could see, touch, and learn all about Pioneer life. There’s a store, a home, a Native American section with a tepee, and the one that the students were most inquisitive about… the school room. They spent 10-15 minutes in the first three sections, choosing mystery items and trying to figure out what they were. Some things haven’t changed much over the years – a waffle iron still looks pretty much the same now as it did then. But I had a great time watching the students choose something more difficult to figure out, and then helping them solve the mystery (with my handy-dandy cheat sheet).

Then Mr. Sumner had the kids sit down on the Pioneer school’s benches (after bowing and curtsying like Pioneer boys and girls must do), and went straight into the role of a Pioneer teacher. The kids ate it up – even the ones who had to stand in the front of the room wearing the “fidgety girl” and “fidgety boy” signs for being, well, fidgety! (So many giggles.) Mr. Sumner has a way of getting his entire class completely submerged in his teachings. They listen, they question (a lot), and they learn. (In the middle of a sea of raised hands, he smiled at me and said he thinks he averages about 680 questions answered daily. I think it’s great – if they weren’t so engaged, he wouldn’t have this situation!)

When the history hour was up, we moved on to the science building where Mr. Sumner turned us over to Ms. Blum for our next adventure. We had to walk in slowly and quietly because the first order of business was holding (only if you want to!) a 5’ long corn snake. The kids lined up in silence and waited patiently for their turn. I learned later from other parents that their children came home talking all about the snake!

The science building is also multi-sectioned. Ms. Blum is clearly in cahoots with Mr. Sumner because she too put us parents to work, giving each a group of kids to go through the learning stations. I loved every single minute of it, and learned more about fossils, birds, bugs, mammals, etc., in one hour than I ever remember learning in my own school days. We looked at all sorts of things in jars of formaldehyde (quite a mixture of oohs and ewws in that section!), and felt the fur coats of so many different animals. The butterfly display was amazing, as was the display of skulls where my group had fun deciding which were predator and which were prey by the size and shape of their teeth! Ms. Blum walked around answering questions and filling their minds with all sorts of interesting facts.

As the field trip came to an end, the students lined up to get back on the bus. Their conversations were a mixture of what they had just experienced, and trying to decide which songs they should sing on the ride back to school.

My daughter Laureli had the best time, and is still talking about it days later – as I’m sure many others are too. A big “thank you!” to Ms. Blum and Mr. Sumner for a wonderful day filled with hands-on learning. (And if you ever need a field trip “assistant” again – count me in!)


~Jennifer Moody

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