Thursday, June 3, 2010

Spring Riverwalks 2010!

Performance artist and poet, Rhonda Morton and Naturalist Educator, Ian McLaughlin from Tanglewood Nature Center presented the Spring Riverwalks to CRSP students. Both presenters asked students to draw on experiences during the fall riverwalks and classroom visits as written in the journals they kept all year.
Morton focused on the use of simile and metaphor in writing and was able to inspire the students to generate some of their own through careful and quiet observation and techniques for building sensory and writing "muscles."

The grass smells like a fresh salad....
The tall grass looks like mist rising...The leaves look like a small bed...the creek whooshes like a conductor's wand...The clover looks like butterflies...The grass looks like the back of a giant bug.

McLaughlin reviewed the water cycle with his students and introduced them to some new fauna. Students learned where the Wyncoop Creek originated and had lots of fun exploring it and discovering new creatures especially hiding under rocks. For some 4th graders, it was their first experience finding crayfish and small bugs and amphibians in the wild.


Center Street teacher, Bob Bartley, accompanies his students to the Chemung River.



A wood pecker was on hand at the Wyncoop Creek offering plenty of sensory output!

It sounds like A whole orchestra: the woodpecker is a drum, the other birds are flutes, the clothes rubbing sound like a guitar...

The woodpecker sounds llike a man chopping wood...


The flowers look like confetti...



Center Street teacher, Elaine Benton, documents the event with her camera.



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