Paddling for students burns off energy and introduces the great Canadian Outdoors. By combining paddling with interactive learning, a floating classroom is created... that no student will forget.
A new approach to outdoor education has been the concept of a floating classroom. In southern Ontario, near Paris, the Grand River is being used as a teaching backdrop. Students can hop aboard a raft with naturalists, foresters and historians to do a paddling adventure into the valley.
Eight-man rafts are used because they paddle like large canoes, but offer total safety. The goal is to get all students into the outdoors... far from the computer screens of feigned reality. The paddle in the hands of the student becomes like the familiar "computer mouse"... maneuvering through the large "River" screen.
The very act of rafting creates team work. As students paddle together, the guide reads a "Joe Bushman" quiz. In response, students banter... seeking the answers. From ridiculous laughter to amazing insight, everyone finds themselves cheering or groaning. There are tough inventive questions like "which animal in the valley fights bum to bum... or how can you keep your pots shiney without scrubbing them?"
Then there is the natural competition between rafts, great effort and energy is spent trying to sneak up and splash. Added are competitions where teams pull to shore to compete in "Cook dat Egg". In this situation, each team is given a pot, egg and matches. The goal is to see which team can build a fire, boil the egg and eat it. The desire to win develops instant team strategy... along with the decision of who will eat it! This whole event brings forth leaders & doers from unexpected corners.
Along the way students can stop to swim or body surf a river swift with life jackets. They also enjoy dumping out their water bottles and filling up with the real stuff from springs. The highlight is the unexpected... spotting a deer, seeing a plunging osprey or surprised by the flash of a large fish. The excitement of "where is it" catches every ones attention.
Hikes are conducted to give a "feel" for the Carolinian Forest that the group is paddling through. There is the chance to see beaver chews, try wild edible plants, taste wild honey and learn aboriginal remedies. Trees identification is taught by using the quirks of smell and touch. There are climbs to scenic bluffs where students Sitting in a classroom overview, the specific characteristics of extinct Neutral feel down in the valley.
The narrative in sitting together in rafts, is where the interest is on the ground and the story says. Every leader has a repertoire of stories ... It tells of animals, European settlers and indigenous people. accommodate the students, not just the story being told. And the flow of issues.
These four hours floating classrooms make the Grand River Valley adventure alive. During the rafting,Students explore the variance in depth of flow. The experience of water power walk against the current of the difficulty of surprises ... gaining a healthy respect for the more turbulent water.
The concept of mobile classroom offers a unique way "to do everything together." Many institutions have blind sided by the image of white water to permit identification of all rafting as risky.
Ironically, it is safer than a canoe or kayak rafting, because the leaderscan control where the students go, and the rafts don't tip.
Teachers will discover that the "inattentive" student thrive in this world of hands-on experiences and story telling. The youth's pretentious veneer peels back with each learning experience. These students are the very ones wishing the trip would not end... and talk about it for days after.
Rafting the Grand River is an excellent field trip. Regardless of size, skill or swimming ability, students can safely experience the river... and still be right in the middle of it all. And that's what the concept of the floating classroom is all about!
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