Trip Overview
The schedule and itinerary sets out the various activities in which
we are proposing to engage Parkers Prairie 8th grade students during
their five days of field investigations in southwestern Minnesota, Badlands
National Park of South Dakota, the Black Hills, and Devil's Tower, Wyoming.
Our stops are intended to not only give the students an opportunity
to gain first-hand familiarity with a wide range of topics (ranging
from the Sioux Quartzite [Blue Mounds State Park] to garnets [southern
Black Hills]; from carving traditions of Native Americans [Pipestone
National Park] to Jesse James epic flight by horseback through Minnesota
and South Dakota [Devils Gulch, Garretson SD]; from ecology [a Nature
Conservancy site in the southern Black Hills] to wind-generated electric
power [Lake Benton MN]), but, more broadly, to further their sense of
curiosity about and inquiry into the world in which we all live.
Background
In the summer of 2001, science teacher, Marlene Schoeneck participated
in the TIMES (Teaching
Inquiry-based Minnesota Earth Science) Project, a venture of the Science
Museum of Minnesota, and hosted at the University
of Minnesota, Morris. The purpose of the course was to infuse more
inquiry-based field investigations into earth science. Instructors
for this class were Lee Schmitt, director of teacher programs at the
Science Museum, and Dr. Peter Whelan, geology professor at the University
of Minnesota, Morris. Peter went on to join Marlene on several day-long
field experiences with her 8th grade students. In Fall 2002, Peter
proposed a week-long series of investigations through the Badlands
and Black Hills of South Dakota, and a partnership in adventure was
born.
After lots of planning and support from UMM and the Parkers Prairie
community, the first journey took place May 12 through 16, 2003. "It
is hard to put into words what we feel has happened over the course
of these five days. Words are by far inadequate, but many times we have
summed it up as simply (or unsimply) "magic." We have watched
kids grow. They have learned cooperation, new friendships, responsibility,
and that they can do far more than they ever felt possible." (Marlene
Schoeneck, May 2003).
Page Author: Pam
Gades
University of Minnesota, Morris
Last Updated:
March 30, 2006