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Community Where Teachers Can Teach
Community Where Students Can Learn |
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Science in the Community - Other Community Resources |
Botanical
gardens, weather stations, hospital laboratories, sewage treatment plants,
newspaper plants, recycling centers, and radio and television stations are only
a few of the kinds of places in your community where your child can learn more
about all kinds of science. Try the following:
Arrange a tour of a recycling center or landfill to show
your child what happens to the community's trash. Before the visit, ask
him to think about questions such as the following: |
- Where does the trash go when it
leaves our home?
- What happens to it?
- How much trash does our community
produce each year?
- What kinds of materials are
recycled?
- What kinds of things can't be
recycled?
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As you tour the facility, have your child ask the questions;
then compare his earlier thoughts to what he has learned.
Contact your local water department
or sewage treatment center to arrange a tour of its
facilities. Before the visit, ask your child to think
about where the water comes from that he drinks and where it
goes when it has been used. Is anything added to the water
to make it safe to drink? Does all the water used in the
community come from the same place? Does all the sewage in
the community go to the same place? What happens to the
sewage? Again, have him compare his earlier answers to what
he learns on the tour.
Finally don't overlook your local public library as a rich
resource for books and magazines on science; videos and
DVDs; free Internet access; special programs—such as book
talks—that relate to science; and much more.
Information source: U.S. Department of Education - Helping Your Child Learn Science |
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