From Deseret News archives:
Science on the move
Traveling botany lesson is fun that just can't be 'beet'
"No, it's a radish."
"I smelled it, and it smells like a garden."
The identification debate goes on here at Neola Elementary. The children are sure the lump on the desk in front of them is not an onion. Not a potato. What is that aroma? Does it smell like anything they've ever smelled before?
Finally, with generous hints from a visiting botanist, one of Mary Jane Page's fourth-graders comes up with the right answer: This is a beet.
But now, another challenge, as the visiting botanist, Michael Windham, asks the class, "What part of the plant is a beet?"
They've already cut it open and learned it has no seeds. So it is not a fruit. It doesn't really look like a leaf, either. Or a flower. Windham shows them a beet with its leaves still attached, and they quickly decide it is a root.
In some ways, this is a typical day in the life of a scientist, whether that scientist is a fourth-grader or a grown-up with several graduate degrees. Any time you are involved in the natural world and asking questions, you are being a scientist, Lorie Millward tells the students.
The van usually carries pieces from the state's collections when it travels. It might carry rocks or fossils or insects or mammals, depending on what class will be taught. This day at Page's request, the van has brought a botany lesson.
Windham, the curator of the state's botany collection, is the teacher. Millward and another outreach educator, Anne Franckum, and museum spokeswoman Patti Carpenter have come along to help.
All of the state curators have developed a class, or a series of classes, having to do with their specialty. Whether he is teaching fourth-graders or college freshmen, Windham likes to use the same principles to introduce botany. He wants students to: Touch. Taste. Chop. Guess (or identify). The approach works with all ages, Windham says. If they get to eat, he says, they like learning.
In Neola, none of the students seems familiar with beets. They seem surprised when Windham tells them, "Beets are one of the plants we use the most." He asks: "What do we get out of beets that everyone eats every day?"
The kids don't know. "Sugar," he tells them. He explains photosynthesis.
Comments
- Officials: No poison in Layton home 1:47 p.m.
- Blog: SUU going backward in Summit... 1:25 p.m.
- Lil Wayne sentencing postponed 1:22 p.m.
- Blog: Flagging heads 1:12 p.m.
- Worker cites gas smell before blast 1:06 p.m.
- Police debate use of family DNA 1:01 p.m.
- Cops search for missing baby 1:01 p.m.
- Job openings plunged in 2009 12:52 p.m.
- Democrats unveil jobs package 12:51 p.m.
- Business-conditions up in January 12:38 p.m.
- Utah Jazz Ironmen
- High school players commit to BYU
- LDS veggie program helps Bolivians
- Lawmakers, educators debate plan
- Utahn's 'Caveman Diet' catching on
- 2nd Layton girl hospitalized from gas
- MWC race shaping 'Survivor' style
- Kaman, not Boozer, on All-Star team
- Cougars hope for fast rebound
- Group cancels 2nd mission to Haiti
- UNLV bombs BYU into loss
184 - Lawmakers, educators debate plan
151 - Why do they hate us? Try asking
139 - Countering attacks on LDS scholarship
131 - Letters: Tea Party hypocrites
115 - Rally in opposition to benefit cuts
90 - Utah football alters schedule
80 - BYU's prime postseason position?
77 - Let's talk college hoops
75 - Korver wants some playing time
74
The Kepler probe, launched 11 months ago to hunt for Earthlike worlds...
Teacher are held accoutable. They are reviewed annually by their principal....
Good teachers will do it anyway and the poor teachers won't work harder for...
You said it. I mean, you'd never see Toyota having to do a massive safety...
Yep.It's just because people don't understand us. I urge people to just ask a...
this won't be considered a hate crime.
SSMD, And yet you cannot prove assault will take place. You only state...
Actually, in looking at Delta's schedule. They have only lost to top 5 teams...
This research is new because it was used for increasing the shear capacity of...
What if that power plant had been one of the planned nuclear "clean energy"...
First off the potato is a vegetable. They taught church members primarily and...



You can be the first to comment on this story.