Forces combine for environmental education
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- School teacher James Martinez was running through the
details of a new district environmental education plan Thursday afternoon
when he let slip a sentence that might serve as a slogan for the entire
program.
“Watch out, fifth grade,” Martinez said. “Water quality is coming your
way.”
At the same table where Martinez sat at the kickoff lunch at the
Riverboat Restaurant were the people who were going to see his promise
come true: officials from the city of Newport Beach, the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District, the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum and the
city’s Harbor Quality Citizens Advisory Committee.
Those groups are teaming up for something called the Partnership for
Clean Water, which aims to bring a greater degree of environmental
awareness to students. A $22,000 project that has been largely funded by
private sources, it will be available for he district’s 1,600
fifth-graders in the school year ahead.
The program, which has been incubated during the past year in
Martinez’s classroom, combines resources from a number of different
agencies to give kids a 10-lesson introduction to some of the area’s most
interesting water quality issues.
At Thursday’s lunch, a diver from the environmental group Orange
County CoastKeeper plunged into the water off the Pride of Newport paddle
wheel boat. Using an underwater camera, he gave the assembled crowd a
view of the marine life -- mostly mussels and sponges -- that flourishes
on the structures beneath the restaurant.
The same experience, under the Partnership’s plan, will now be
available for fifth-graders, who will visit the paddle wheel boat on
field trips.
Students will also get to check out an environmental video, “Respect
the Beach,” prepared by the Surfrider Foundation. Additionally, water
testing, to be performed at local waterways, will be incorporated into
the curriculum.
Along the way, said Bonnie Swann, Newport-Mesa’s director of
elementary education, students will be tested for their knowledge of
environmental concepts and terminology.
What officials hope to see, Swann said, is a quantifiable improvement
in fifth-graders’ understanding of the way things like pollution and
urban runoff affect the environment.
“If anyone asks us, we can tell them, ‘Yes, we believe in the power of
this [program],’ and here is the data to show them,” she said.
The hard evidence should be useful, Swann said, because other
districts in the county are said to be looking at the Partnership’s
program as a model for developing their own environmentally oriented
units.
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