Lesson 11- Making the Most of Community Resources and Field Trips
If I were asked to quickly list some
instructional tools for teachers, I'd rattle off questioning strategies, concept
mapping, and computers—but I doubt that field trips would pop into my mind. Many
educators don't take field trips seriously because we associate them with fun.
They also have their drawbacks: They're costly, logistically involved,
extravagant with time, and contain an element of uncertainty. No wonder kids
like them so much. Most teachers still take at least one field trip each
year
Justifying Field
Trips
Field
trips without obvious academic content can be hard to sell to administrators
focused on test scores. To obtain approval, most teachers try to justify field
trips by citing standards and curriculum goals. Nevertheless, the trips often
get tacked onto the back end of the school year, the assumption being that they
are unlikely to directly support the reading and math skills that show up on
yearly standardized achievement tests.
Field
trips offer, however, a crucial advantage: They can bring balance to the
curriculum. The most popular destinations—museums, zoos, outdoor venues, and
performances—have a natural fit with science, history, and the arts, subjects
that have been marginalized by our current focus on basic
skills.
Moreover, musical and theatrical
performances provide opportunities that many students would not otherwise have
to watch talented people demonstrate their arts. When I taught 2nd grade, we
attended the free concerts that the local symphony orchestra performed during
the day for schoolchildren. Most of our schools regularly take field trips to
the community college, where students attend free plays. Performance field trips
not only have the potential to develop aesthetic appreciation in students, but
they can also develop background knowledge and oral vocabulary, which improve
reading comprehension (Torgeson, 1998).
Funding Field
Trips
When
it comes to resource allocation, field trips are not a priority for districts.
Few field trips are included in school budgets, so most funds often come from
parents (Anderson, Kisiel, & Storksdieck, 2006). The biggest contributors,
besides individual families, are site-based parent organizations that often pay
for the entire field trip, transportation, or scholarships for students whose
families cannot afford the fees.
Many local grant programs fund field trips,
so an Internet search and a simple grant proposal can be worthwhile. For
example, one of our local quarries paid to bus a group of earth science students
out for a site visit because the management saw it as a way to create goodwill
in the community. A few organizations, such as Target, have grant programs
specifically designed to fund field trips (Target,
n.d.).
Educational
field trips may be developed by each school to provide a variety of experiences
and enhance the student's educational opportunities. Although field trips are
adjunct to the instructional program, each is a learning activity and bears a
direct relationship to the normal school experience.
For
optimum student benefit, each field trip must be well planned beforehand and
thoroughly evaluated after completion. The teacher or sponsor in charge of the
group is responsible for the activity just as if it were conducted at school.
All students within the class or school group must be given the opportunity to
participate in the field trip.
This
procedure has been developed to assist schools in planning and conducting
educational field trips and travel to school-oriented activities off campus. The
overall objective is to facilitate optimum learning experiences through
educational field trips and school-sponsored student travel to approved
activities.
FIELD
TRIPS AND OTHER STUDENT TRAVEL
The
Board recognizes that field trips, when used for teaching and learning integral
to the curriculum, are an educationally sound and important ingredient in the
instructional program of the schools. Properly planned and executed field trips
should:
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A.
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supplement and enrich
classroom procedures by providing learning experiences in an environment outside
the schools;
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B.
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arouse new interests among
students;
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C.
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help students relate school
experiences to the reality of the world outside of
school;
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D.
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bring the resources of the
community - natural, artistic, industrial, commercial, governmental, educational
- within the student's learning experience;
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E.
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afford students the
opportunity to study and explore real situations and processes in their actual
environment.
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For
purposes of this procedure, a field trip shall be defined as any planned journey
for one or more students away from District premises, which is under the
supervision of an instructional staff member and an integral part of a course of
study.
Other
student travel shall be defined as any planned, student-travel activity that is
approved as part of the District's total educational
program.
The
Superintendent shall prepare administrative procedures for the operation of both
field and other District-sponsored trips, including athletic trips, which shall
ensure:
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A.
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the safety and well-being
of students;
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B.
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parental permission is
sought and obtained before any student leaves the District on a
trip;
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C.
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each trip is properly
planned, and if a field trip, is integrated with the curriculum, evaluated, and
followed up by appropriate activities which enhance its
usefulness;
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D.
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the effectiveness of field
trip activities is judged in terms of demonstrated learning
outcomes;
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E.
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each trip is properly
monitored and supervised;
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F.
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student behavior while on
all field trips complies with the Student Code of Conduct and on all other
rules, policies, and procedures set forth by
schools;
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G.
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a copy of each student's
Emergency Medical Authorization Form is in the possession of the staff member in
charge.
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