North-Central - 52nd Annual Meeting

Paper No. 43-4
Presentation Time: 2:30 PM

FIVE YEARS OF GEOSCIENCE OUTREACH AT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL STUDENTS IN RURAL, WESTERN MINNESOTA: MORE THAN SHOW-AND-TELL


CRABTREE, Stephen, Division of Science and Mathematics, University of Minnesota, Morris, 600 E. 4th St, Morris, MN 56267

Over the past five years, starting in Fall, 2012, I have developed an outreach program from the University of Minnesota, Morris Geology Discipline. These efforts have targeted elementary school classes and students in Stevens and Pope County. Many of these schools serve small communities, with town populations below 800, and many class sizes below twenty students, in in some cases less than ten. In total, these presentations have brought the wonders of geology to students ranging from 3rd- to 6th-grade, as well as one school’s 8th-graders, presented both within and outside of classroom settings. With over thirty presentations delivered to-date, at six different schools or other venues, there have been multiple opportunities to better-target these students as an audience. Topics covered have extended beyond merely “pretty rocks,” and have included more in-depth treatments on fundamental minerals and rock types, the growth and cause of fluorescent minerals and geodes, volcanology and magmatism, the geology of Minnesota, and geologic hazards. Student feedback has been joyful, insightful, and revealing.

Not only have presentations to these students forced me to recognize how to put geologic principles into truly simple, comprehensible terms, but these same students, some of whom additionally have severe learning disabilities, are generally underserved and ignored by university faculty. They need to be given more attention, as their often-limited scope of the world beyond their small towns can be significantly expanded by visiting professors. Through this work, I have developed a series of presentations that may be applied by other faculty in other settings, with an emphasis on opening the world of geosciences to young students with a generally narrow range of prior experiences with the world of geology.