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An international program for kindergarten through twelfth-grade
students that blends environmental science with art and literacy
is under way in Alabama thanks to a multidisciplinary partnership.
River of Words (ROW) is a U.S.
Library of Congress-affiliated program designed to promote watershed
awareness, literacy and |
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the arts. This year,
for the first time, the program is being offered in Alabama.
Already involved in many outreach
programs for Alabama’s youth, the Auburn-based Alabama
Center for the Book and AU Environmental Institute (AUEI) joined
together to bring the program to Alabama along with the Auburn
University College of Agriculture, Alabama Agricultural Experiment
Station and the AU Libraries, and other on- and off-campus affiliates.
The result is the creation of an interdisciplinary learning
experience in the arts and environmental sciences to benefit
Alabama’s youngest stewards.
“The project weaves together
natural, environmental and forestry education with significant
arts education. Utilizing one discipline to teach the other
makes each subject more accessible to a wider range of students,
allowing for various learning styles and approaches,”
explains Jay Lamar of the Alabama Center for the Book.
The River of Words program invites
students to explore the natural and cultural history of their
local watersheds—the puddles and ponds of their own backyards—and
then to express, through poetry and art, what they discover.
That creative work is submitted to a national ROW contest, from
which eight national winners are chosen. Those eight students
receive a trip to Washington, D.C., where they are recognized
in a Library of Congress-sponsored awards ceremony.
Alabama’s submissions will
be sent directly to the national competition, but they will
also be judged on the state level. State winners will be honored
in an awards ceremony to be held in April in conjunction with
AU’s Earth Day celebration.
The deadline for submitting students’
art and poetry work to the national ROW office is Feb. 15, 2004.
Guidelines for the contest, teaching guides for educators and
more background on ROW are available at the national ROW Web
site, www.riverofwords.org, or the Alabama Web site, http://riverofwords.auburn.edu.
To learn more about Alabama ROW call the AUEI at 334-844-4132
or Alabama Center for the Book at 334-844-4946.
Though Alabama’s ROW program is available statewide,
organizers are conducting an enhanced pilot project to create
special environmental/watershed outdoor classroom experiences
for under-resourced students in Alabama’s Black Belt,
beginning with students in the Wilcox County schools. These
events were held last fall at the Black Freedmen’s Living
Historical Farm for Children, Inc., in Furman, Ala. Students,
such as those pictured above, got lots of hands-on art and science
experience.
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