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Stories in Virginia

A Living Textbook

Connecting students and teachers with the natural environment through hands-on activities and experiences.

View looking down on four students crowding around a TNC staff member who is holding out a small fiddler crab for them to see.

Virginia’s Eastern Shore is a living textbook waiting to be opened. The Volgenau Virginia Coast Reserve's (VVCR) education program aims to connect students and educators in Accomack and Northampton Counties to the natural world through experiential field trips and professional development opportunities.

Six children standing in groups of two use dip nets to explore a tidal creek. The surface of the creek is gently rippled. Tall pine trees line the horizon in the background.
Hands On Learning

Connecting Students and Nature

Studies have shown that repeated field experiences have a measurable impact on student performance. That’s why we’ve made it our goal for every student on the Eastern Shore to have multiple opportunities during elementary, middle and high school to visit the reserve, especially those who may not even realize how many incredible things they can find right in their own backyard.

Active since 2018, the curriculum-based trips have been designed for 5th, 7th and 10th grade students. Students have an opportunity for hands-on learning in different Eastern Shore ecosystems. 5th graders visit the historic 1250-acre Brownsville Preserve, while 7th graders examine the seaside tidal creeks via kayak. The 10th grade field trips include a boat trip across the coastal bays to VVCR’s Parramore Island, where students practice scientific data collection and analysis and learn about barrier island dynamics.

All grade levels learn about native plant and animal species and practice data collection using a variety of scientific techniques and equipment in the field.  

The field experiences were collaboratively designed with local educators through participatory workshops to ensure they are aligned with Virginia’s Standards of Learning (SOLs). The field trips are intended to enhance curriculum and make real-world connections with activities and learning points in the classroom. Seeing an American oystercatcher or a harbor seal and even being on a boat—a first for many students—become lasting memories.

All costs for public schools in Accomack and Northampton Counties—including bus rental and substitute teacher wages—are covered by The Nature Conservancy through a grant funded by NOAA’s Bay Watershed Education and Training (B-WET) program.

In addition to the MWEE-based (Meaningful Watershed Educational Experiences) field experience initiative and two summer Nature Camp programs for children ages 6-12, the VVCR education program also provides support to local teachers and students of all grade levels through innovative approaches such as virtual classroom visits and field-based video lessons to continue the children’s connection with nature when hands-on group activities are not possible.


 

Connecting with Nature

Virginia’s Eastern Shore is a living textbook waiting to be opened. VVCR's education program aims to connect students and educators in Accomack and Northampton Counties to the natural world through experiential field trips and professional development opportunities.

A smiling girl holds up a test tube filled with water collected from a pond.
A group of kids sit around a picnic table working on a science project.
A boy holds the end of a long yellow tap measure stretched out along the beach.
A parent chaperone leads a group a boys through the seaside marsh grass.
A smiling boy holds up two crabs.
Two boys splash and laugh in the surf.
A smiling boy looks up at the camera while holding binoculars.
A girl works on an art project.
A boy holds up a butterfly trap showing what he has collected.
A group of students post with TNC staff on Parramore Island, standing at the edge of the beach in ankle deep surf.

Professional Development: A Community of Educators

VVCR's education program also offers a variety of professional development opportunities throughout the year for local educators in all grade levels and disciplines, including workshops on coastal resilience and coastal bay ecology. 

At the start of each school year, we invite new teachers and administrators from Accomack and Northampton Counties to explore Brownsville Preserve and the barrier islands with our staff to learn more about the services we can provide them and their students, with an ultimate goal of connecting these teachers—and their students—to the special place where they live and work.

The intensive, week-long professional development workshop—Exploring Virginia’s Coast—is offered free of charge each summer by TNC to all local teachers regardless of grade or discipline taught, thanks in part to funding from The Volgenau Foundation.

Each day centers around one of VVCR’s core conservation areas, including land protection, marine habitat restoration, migratory bird conservation and coastal resilience and climate change. Teachers are immersed in daily field experiences, expert presentations and robust group discussions. The field experiences provide time to explore VVCR’s barrier islands while trips to TNC restoration sites offer opportunities to see our work in action.

In some cases, as with our oyster reef restoration work, the teachers get to jump in and get hands on, whether filling bags with oyster shells collected by TNC volunteers at local seafood festivals or donning rubber gloves to help build concrete reef substrate.

In 2020, the realities of COVID-19 presented unique challenges. The first field-based, hands on professional development workshop of the 2020/21 school year was held in August, following carefully developed safety protocols put in place by the VVCR outreach and education team led by Outreach and Education Coordinator Margaret Van Clief and Preserve and Education Manager Jenny Miller.

VVCR was delighted to welcome teachers back in August 2021, hosting educators from Accomack and Northampton County Public Schools and Broadwater Academy. We feel certain that these educators can handle with strength and compassion the post-Pandemic challenges that face them—we only wish we could give them another week to brainstorm and unwind in the wilderness first!

Contact

Jennifer Miller, Preserve and Education Manager
(757) 442-3049
email: jennifer.miller@tnc.org

Margaret Van Clief, Outreach and Education Coordinator
(757) 442-3049
email: margaret.vanclief@tnc.org

  • Field Experience Partnership Opportunities

    Connecting students and teachers with the natural environment through hands-on activities and experiences.

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