The highlight of my week so far has been getting to go on this Houston Water Treatment facility field trip. I think it was really well done. The whole experience was such that I could tell that it would be super engaging for my students, and somehow managed to keep me fascinated as well.I just loved the variety of methods they used to get information across. It allowed me to take it all in in a format that wasn’t boring or repetitive and engaged all my senses. It’s reminding me of how when I am back in the classroom this year, that the more modalities I can teach my students in, the better the information will stick. They really did get across the different points of why water was important, how much we use (which is always surprising) ways we harm our water, etc.
For instance, for sound, they had pipes that you could talk into and hear someone else on the other side–what they would “sound like through water”. They also had a model boat that was full of trash to demonstrate visually how much pollution is dumped into our water ways. They allowed you to taste the water the that was made there with the continual emphasis on how the quality is superior quality by the time it leaves the facilities. They had displays that had tactile components–and they even guided us through with a scavenger hunt to find the important information throughout the museum.
I even really enjoyed the “Water Cycle” Lesson that they had us do after going through the museum portion. It was really fun! I also immediatley started thinking about all the different ways I could implment a similar lesson in the future with other concepts that I teach during the year. As I was talking to a group of other teachers at lunch some suggested things like the carbon or nitrogen cycle as other ways a lesson similar to this could be used.
I will certainly try and see if I can schedule field trip for my students to go to this one, especially since we have a Watershed unit in our curriculum toward the end of the year.
A display that showed how much water was consumed doing normal household tasks
A display that showed water borne pathogens in a really interesting way–as wanted posters.
A model boat and the amount of trash that you can find in our bodies of water.
This was part of the lesson plan where we got to pretend we were a water molecule and travel through all the different parts of the water cycle by rolling some die.
Loved it! Even though we were unable to tour their actually treatment side of the facilities due to their expansion and renovations–even the part that we did get to do was truly exceptional!
The Houston WaterWorks Educational Center is always amazing. It truly is a place to take your students to get them thinking about water usage, sources, and contamination.