Friday, July 1, 2016

Pictures of Spring in Photos and Data

The Data is In; What did Spring Looking Like this Year?



On Friday we went up to the pool for the last time this year. We also returned some of the critters we had been keeping in the classroom. I also just uploaded all the data for this spring.

Judy Gibson, Francis Parker Charter School, Devens, Ma. 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW DATABASE FEATURE:

Field Site Photos can be shared in Field Site Description section of the online database.



Teachers can email their field site photos to Emery Boose to post on the online database at any time.
Excerpt from HF Schoolyard  Field Site Data Base with link to Photo Above

Schoolyard teacher, Janet Gordon has sent this photo of her field site from Tewksbury High School.  See all sites' field site data at:  http://harvardforest2.fas.harvard.edu/asp/hf/php/admin/k12/k12_sites_list.php




Views from New York City



     


Photos and Excerpts from Brooklyn Technical High School students led by teacher Elisa Margarita.  In her first year with the Schoolyard Ecology program, Elisa collaborated with veteran Schoolyard Teacher, Lise Letellier from Holyoke, Ma. to engage her students in analyzing and interpreting data.  


Mei Hua Mei's AP Environmental Science Harvard Forest Schoolyard LTER program Report. 



Explanation:
The question of global warming and climate change is the theme of this experiment and the effect of both may be demonstrated through this intensive research conducted by Harvard's long term ecological research. Although  the data presented above is only a small portion of the large platter of information presented to Harvard yearly, my data and the data collected this year is contributing to a larger look at the effects of climate change and global warming on our ecosystems. Climate change is creeping up on us, and we do not even realize it. Throughout the years, our ecosystems have been slowly changing and we may not have noticed because of these slow changes. With year after year of contributions to the study, Harvard is able to piece together a broad spectrum of the effects of Climate change; effects that may not to obvious to us in our day to day lives. 


Wrapping Up:
Through this experience, I was able to learn about collecting data and conducting research. It felt really great to be apart of a study that has been running for so long. It was truly an honor to be able to say “I am doing a project for Harvard.” Since this project started in the beginning of APES class, it was a good introduction to the skills we would need for the rest of the year. For example, we learned how to collect data, take measurements, identify trees, make observations, handle tools, work as a group, and more. So, not only was the Harvard Lab an honor to conduct, it was also a vital introductory project that would lead us to the rest of the course with an understanding for conducting research and working as scientists in a group. 
This project was very eye opening and interesting to conduct. However the class and I encountered some difficulties. Since we did not have(past) data for our trees, we had to use data from another school. This presented a loss of purpose for the assignment because a large portion of our report went to analysing information for a tree we did not observe. This problem can be easily fixed by entering the data for our trees onto the Harvard database. 
My favorite part of this project was having an opening and closing for our APES year. The Harvard Project was our opening assignment for the school year and one of the last assignments in the closing of the year. We started this project with all of our Firsts of the year. Our first time going to fort greene for class, our first time doing a lab, and our first time working in groups with kids that we barely knew. And by the end of the year, when we went out again to take our Spring data, it was our two hundredth time going to fort greene for class, our nine hundredth lab, and our fiftieth time working in groups with our closest schools friends.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mohamad Amin                                                                                                                6/12/2016
AP Environmental Science

Harvard Forest Schoolyard Ecology - American Elm and Red Maple

            Our tree was an American Elm, or Ulmus Americana, it is a deciduous tree with a range all across the eastern United States, it favours a whole range of habitats but generally likes being near areas with lots of water. It is a highly resistant tree, the common enemy of this tree is the Dutch elm disease. It has elliptic to lanceolate leaves that are pinnate and serrated, the leaves are arranged alternately. This tree has a long growing season and can continue growing into the late fall, unaffected by the loss of sunlight.
            This experiment was a group project, as a group we were free to select a tree and we chose the American elm. During the autumn we measured the rate at which the leaves of the tree changed colour and when/if the trees finally separated from the branch. This was a weekly task and continued until winter. Once winter was over and spring began, the project restarted with a different focus; we were to measure the buds of the tree and see how long it took to begin sprouting new leaves.




            Due to complications involving our data, I was not able to complete this project using my own data. Instead I had to use data from the Harvard Tree database. As of such I chose a Red Maple from the data taken by Holyoke Catholic High School. The Red Maple is another extremely hardy species with a varied habitat.
The data taken from Holyoke indicated that this tree quickly bursts and gets it leaves during the end of April and beginning of May. The Red Maple would go from no leaves at all during the week of April 20th, it would have seventy percent budburst during the following week and by the tenth of May it would be fully opened.



 Leaf Length follows similar trends to the budburst. The tree is completely devoid of leaves until the end of April but once the buds have burst, the  leaves grow rapidly. They reach 2 centimeters by the end of April and quickly jump up to the 10 centimeters by around the beginning of May. After it has reached ten centimeters, it quickly flattens out and stops growing. This is indicative of quick growth and it would mean that Red Maples can quickly establish themselves.



Trends can also be seen with the changing of leaf colours for the Red Maple. The Red Maple seems to have a slight on or off switch with the colour change. For the majority of the year, since it gains its leaves they maintain a solid 2.0 tree color. However during the week of 23 October, the tree undergoes a radical shift and the leaf colour shifts radically. It gains its famous red coloration and is part of the standard colour changing during the autumn season. The colour changes rapidly from green to red, once the change begins and completes itself within the week, the colouration does not change much anymore.

The amount of leaves that have fallen from the trees followed similar trends too. The tree would be completely fine for most of the year until a week in October. The week of October 29th saw the Red Maple completely lose all of its leaves. It was not even a period of a week, it was closer to four or five days, but in that time the Red Maple managed to go from 0% leaf lost to 100% leaves lost. During this time, Data was only taken twice between the time it went from 0 to 100 percent lost. At one point it was at 40 percent but by the next time of data collection, all of the leaves had fallen.

This project was a complicated a long term one. The American Elm tree that we originally selected was a major part of it, we got a lot of data on it but the fact that it was not very organized (the Spring data was submitted and we didn’t have a backup) meant that it could not actually be used for this report.



Spring Budburst Data Looks Like this from across 4 Schools: 


Westfield, Mass.  


Easthampton Mass.

  
 Holyoke Mass.




Worcester, Mass. 


Explore more data from this year


To see all data entered to our database this year go to:


download Schoolyard data


To see sites and their data on our interactive site map go to: 

Interactive site-data map















To graph data from any of our Schoolyard field sites, go to:

Online graphing tool



Stay Tuned for part 2 of Looking at What Spring Data Looks Like..from Harvard Forest Ecologists and Schoolyard resources..Coming Soon

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Schoolyard Ecology Teacher, Lise Letellier, Presidential Award for Excellence in Science Teaching Finalist Award


Journalist Josh Binswanger introduced  The Massachusetts Finalists for the 2015 Presidential Awards for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching at a Celebration in Honoring Excellence in Teaching at the State House on June 15, 2016.


Massachusetts Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education Mitchell D. Chester presented the PAEMST Finalist award to Holyoke Catholic High School Teacher, Lise Letellier.



Lise Letellier has been featured on this blog several times for her contributions to the Buds, Leaves and Global Warming Schoolyard Ecology project.   Her presentation about her 5 year journey with this project was featured this spring on the following entry:


In addition to having mentored many new Schoolyard Eco teachers and contributing  numerous teaching resources she developed on the Harvard Forest Website, some of her Phenology curriculum is published on the LTER Education Digital Library.  Lise  and her students have also contributed to the Woolly Bully and the Hemlock Trees project.

Aside from her work with Harvard Forest, Lise has also served as a mentor and leader for the Appalachian Mountain Club, engaging both teachers and students in outdoor investigations. This work has been highlighted in a national  Project Learning Tree newsletter.

Lise's contributions to STEM education extend beyond leading field projects.  She has led the science department at her school for several years, and is the chair of the K-12 STEM Professional Development Steering Committee for the Springfield Diocese, and has served in the past on the Pioneer Valley STEM Executive Committee as well as the the review committee for the Mass. STEM Summit. 

Please join me in congratulating Lise for her EXTRAORDINARY contributions to science teaching!

We wish you every success in being honored at the National level....Final awardees are expected to be chosen later this summer.




Friday, June 10, 2016

Petersham Center School Student Wins Statewide Arbor Day Poster Contest!

Fifth grader, Lillian Maxwell's  Arbor Day poster from the Petersham Center School won the state-wide DCR competition this year.  




Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR)  hosted an awards ceremony and tree planting session at the Petersham Center School yesterday, led by Urban and Community Forester Julie Coop.

          
  

 A number of 5th graders from throughout the state were also honored with Honorable Mention Awards.  This year's theme was "Trees Grow With Us and For Us".  Each of the winning posters approached showing how trees benefit us in very different and effective ways.




 

 Two Petersham students shared  Tree Poems at the Ceremony



  It was the Petersham Center School's first year participating in the contest.  Harvard Forest Education and Outreach director, Clarisse Hart approached 5th grade teacher, Melissa Fournier, with the idea of participating in the contest.  Melissa enthusiastically took on the idea, and arranged for the Petersham Tree Committee and Harvard Forest to work with students in learning about "ecosystem services" that trees provide.  Sheila Youd of the Petersham Tree Committee even led a tree drawing lesson for the students.

5th Grade Teacher, Melissa Fournier
Reads "The Giving Tree"


Petersham Center School Principal, Joanne Menard speaks to
audience about the importance of Trees in Petersham
















The Arbor Day  Ceremony ended with a Popsicle Party

Tuesday, May 17, 2016


Woolly Bully and the Hemlock Trees Project Ecologist David Orwig has been all over the news recently.  



David Orwig and Gary Lovett, a scientist from the Cary Institute contributed to new paper dealing with invasive pests and pathogens that was released by  the Science & Policy Exchange recently.  This paper has been getting tremendous media attention.

The following update was put together by Clarisse Hart :

Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Printer-friendly version
Imported forest pests cause more than $2 billion in damage each year and can be found in all 50 U.S. states. Efforts to prevent new pests must be strengthened if we are to slow the loss of our nation’s trees, says a new study co-authored by Harvard Forest scientists David Orwig and David Foster. The study was led by the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and coordinated by the Science Policy Exchange, a research consortium based at the Harvard Forest and led by Kathy Fallon Lambert and Marissa Weiss
The study, published today in Ecological Applications, was conducted by a team of 16 scientists - from Harvard Forest, the USDA Forest Service, The Nature Conservancy, Dartmouth College, McGill University, and Michigan State University. It is the most comprehensive synthesis to date on forest pests. It covers both ecological and economic impacts and evaluates a range of policy solutions.
According to the study, 57 imported forest pests live in Massachusetts today. Our region is particularly susceptible to new pests because our forests contain many trees that are closely related to trees in Europe and Asia.
Today, sixty-three percent of U.S. forestland, or 825 million acres, are at risk of increased damage from pests that have already established here. 70% of those forest pests arrived on imported plants. An average of 2 to 3 new pests arrive each year.
Current efforts to prevent new pests are not keeping pace with escalating trade. However, the study reports that current trade policies are projected to return $11 billion in net benefits by 2050. The authors project larger benefits with stronger pest prevention efforts.
(Photo of dead oaks on Martha's Vineyard, due to invasive winter moth caterpillars, by David Foster.)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Listen to this radio interview David Orwig at: 







More articles related to this story:  


Newsweek
http://www.newsweek.com/more-forest-pests-ever-are-entering-us-and-its-costing-public-fortune-458060


WESA – Pittsburgh
http://wesa.fm/post/pa-second-only-ny-number-invasive-forest-pest-species

E&E News Greenwire
http://www.eenews.net/greenwire/2016/05/10/stories/1060036983

 


Twitter Highlights: 

From @postgreen:
https://twitter.com/postgreen/status/730068597897363458  


 
From @USLTER
https://twitter.com/USLTER/status/730083988438548480 




For more information on the Woolly Bully and the Hemlock Trees Schoolyard Ecology study for students in grades 4-12, go to:




Teachers can register to participate in a workshop to learn how to lead the Woolly Bully citizen science study in their schools at:








Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Profile of Excellence in Environmental Education

What does Excellence Look Like? 



Francis Parker Charter School Teacher, Judy Gibson was recognized at the Massachusetts State House this week for Excellence in Environmental Education. 



Judy Gibson is not the kind of person who draws attention to herself in the usual ways. She comes off as quiet and reserved.  She may appear to be sitting back, as she lets others take center stage. Throughout it all, she is carefully observing, listening and researching.  She then takes the information and opportunities she has gathered up, and works step by step at crafting meaningful experiences for her students.  Judy’s students are given the foundation from which they can become citizens who care about our earth and water; Citizens who know about our earth and water from direct experiences in their Middle School years, thanks to one teacher’s thoughtful approach to education.  This is the kind of experience I hope all students can receive in order to best prepare them to make wise choices about our natural resources as they mature into responsible citizens.




Judy has dedicated many years to providing Middle School students opportunities to delve deeply in exploring, researching and touching aquatic and terrestrial natural systems within reach of their school.  Judy is a key part of the middle school science team at Parker. She is one of three teachers, who do a great deal of collaboration in designing the natural science units.  Judy has engaged students in field research projects in their local environment, beginning with vernal pools in walking distance from their school, for well over 7 years.  In 2009, Judy added to the work she set up for her students to include a scientific protocol looking at hydrology of vernal pools in cooperation with  Harvard Forest Ecologist, Betsy Colburn. Judy not only succeeded in getting students to collect pool diameters, and depths, etc. at her own school, but she became a mentor for teachers at a network of other schools involved in this work as well.  Judy regularly presented the innovative curriculum and learning methods she developed at the Parker Charter School with teachers from a wide range of schools at teacher workshops, so that more students could benefit from this work.



Who Eats Who? 

In 2013, Judy led a group of teachers from the Parker Charter School in taking on an investigation of forest dynamics as a team.  She and her 2 colleagues teamed up with more ecologists at Harvard Forest. They led their students in setting up and monitoring a series of forested study plots in their schoolyards.  Their students have collected tree species and diameter data, observed sign of wildlife, invasive species and pests, and many other field site characteristics as part of this study in the past 3 years.  In contributing to this study Judy and her colleagues provide data that can be compared region wide to tell a story of land use change over time.  With this combined information, we can begin to get a better picture of how forests are changing throughout New England.







 Judy’s efforts have led to 20-150 students each year participating in authentic environmental field studies, as well as the broader reach of presenting and sharing materials and data with a network of over 100 teachers.  These students are getting the opportunity to be real scientists and to connect and learn about the water and earth around them.  Judy takes the extra time and effort needed to organize and manage working outdoors both during the school day and in after school group.  It is this kind of in depth dedicated work over the long term that makes Judy’s work stand out.  I am thrilled that she has been honored by the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and the Environment for her outstanding work.

 


To learn more, go to the following links:



            







See Powerpoint slide presentations that Judy Gibson has shared with Schoolyard Ecology teachers: 


2015.Life in a Wicked Big Puddle-VP.pdf

2015.Starting The Our Changing Forests Projects-Year 1.pdf

.2014.Shepley Hill Vernal Pool.pdf


Find the Parker Charter School location on our interactive map and explore project data:

google.com.Schoolyard maps


More about the Our Changing Forests project:

http://harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/Our_Changing_Forests


More about the Vernal Pool project:

http://harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/water-landscape-vernal-pools



More about the Excellence in Environmental Education Awards:













Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Trees are Greening Up as I write this....


Take a look outside in most of  our region and you will see that the trees are beginning to leaf out...one by one....


You know what that means, Buds, Leaves and Global Warming Teachers!

If you haven't already, get your students outside as soon as possible to track leaf emergence on your study trees.



We are excitedly collecting spring data on our trees. We had a surprise last week, pictured in these attachments. A beaver felled the crab apple tree #18. The study leaves were out so the team measured them and recorded on the data sheet but I guess this will be the last year for that tree! We have not seen the beaver but the tree was standing the week before. 



Photo and comments from Jane Lucia, Williston Northampton School 



Here is what the Phenocams are showing:


From the Northeast (Reading, Ma.)






What phenological changes can you see on any of these trees between
March 8th and April 26th?



Southwestern Massachusetts (Springfield)





Mid Atlantic Region (25 miles from Washington DC): 







North Carolina:






What are things looking like near your school???


Please send us photos and notes from your field site and/or school location so we can better see where buds are bursting and leaves are emerging.


Email photos and comments to Pamela Snow at psnow@fas.harvard.edu


To search for canopy images from throughout North America: 

Go to the Phenocam website at:https://phenocam.sr.unh.edu/webcam


For more about tracking Budburst through The Harvard Forest Schoolyard Ecology program: