Experiential Education Lessons

Attached you will find experiential education lessons to try in your classroom! Experiential Learning is the process of learning by doing. By engaging students in hands-on experiences and reflection, they are better able to connect theories and knowledge learned in the classroom to real-world situations.

When students participate in experiential education opportunities, they gain:

  • A better understanding of course material

  • A broader view of the world and an appreciation of community

  • Insight into their own skills, interests, passions, and values

  • Opportunities to collaborate with diverse organizations and people

  • Positive professional practices and skill sets

  • The gratification of assisting in meeting community needs

  • Self-confidence and leadership skills

Experiential Education lessons courtesy of Utah Valley University students.

Black and Red Game
Canyon Crossing
Human Knot
Magic Carpet
Rainbow Race
Sleight of Hand
Tower Building
Traffic Jam
Helium Stick
Knot Untie
Scrambled Puzzle
Translator

Backyard Learning

This is the blog of a licensed middle school science teacher, with an M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction. Her teaching experience includes several years in experiential/outdoor education as well as time as a public school middle grades science teacher. In a world that is filled with more and more screen time, it is her goal to share lessons and ideas for engaging children in science and the natural world.

https://backyardlearning.wordpress.com/

Earth Rangers

Earth Rangers primarily focuses on grades K-6 with easy-to-use resources to ignite passion in students.  The page acts as a one-stop shop for environmental learning and has concise and engaging material.

School Assemblies

The Earth Rangers School Assembly is an exciting and interactive presentation complete with live animals, games and trivia, captivating video content, and two enthusiastic presenters who explain complex environmental issues in a way kids can understand. We not only teach kids about the environmental issues our planet is facing — we empower them to take action.

Eco Clubs

We’ve got everything you need to create and sustain a fun and impactful Eco Club at your school or in your community.

Professional Development

Eco-Anxiety course: How do we help today’s children channel their environmental concerns into eco-action? Our NEW micro-credential on Eco-Anxiety is one of the first of its kind. The course material will help educators incorporate specific strategies into their teaching practices to help empower students.

https://homeroom.earthrangers.com/

Wild Classroom

World Wildlife Foundation’s Wild Classroom

The World Wildlife Foundation aims to connect educators and parents with the tools and resources they need to help kids explore and understand the world around them.  Their site offers various lesson plans on animals, ecosystems, and even food waste.  They also have a catalog of recorded lectures where educators can learn of efforts to have conservation connections in the classroom.

https://www.worldwildlife.org/teaching-resources

Plant Heros

Plant Heros offers many free lesson plans on plant-based learning ideas and other ways to connect with natural resources.  It offers a library of free educator resources and helps connect teachers with local gardens for hands-on educational experiences. Resources include lesson plans, journal pages, conservation comics, field guides, activity books, and more for grades K-5.
To increase access, our materials are available in three languages: English, Spanish, and simplified Chinese.

https://plantheroes.org/?educator

EPA Resources

Lesson Plans, Teacher Guides and Online Environmental Resources for Educators

Find an array of environmental and science-based lesson plans, activities and ideas from EPA, other federal agencies, and external organizations. Lesson plans are broken down by grade, and include topics like water, climate change, energy, air, and health.

https://www.epa.gov/students/lesson-plans-teacher-guides-and-online-environmental-resources-educators

Audubon Adventures

Engaging students in grades 3 through 6 in nature study and environmental stewardship.

Audubon Adventures introduces young people to the world of nature and wildlife through colorful magazines, online features and interactive games and puzzles, plus activities, guidance, and resources for educators. Designed for classrooms and other educational settings as well as for enjoyment at home, Audubon Adventures opens children’s hearts and minds to the wonders of birds, other wildlife, and the fascinating and complex natural world that is Planet Earth.

Developed by professional educators and scientists, Audubon Adventures is designed to be integrated easily into any curriculum area: science, mathematics, language arts, social studies, and the creative arts. It has been used in classrooms, home-school settings, after-school programs, camp programs, ESL classes, and more. Since its inception in 1984, more than 7 million students have participated in the program.

https://www.audubon.org/conservation/audubon-adventures

Wasatch Mountain Institute

Wasatch Mountain Institute’s goal is to connect children, families, and communities to the wonder, recreational and educational opportunities of the Wasatch mountains. WMI has a nature center at Jordanelle State Park where they hold school, community programs and Teacher Retreats. They offer day trips, overnight options, host snow school in the winter months, and have a program that integrates place-based learning with technology. Check them out!

Wasatch Mountain Institute’s educational programs are designed to:

  • Showcase the power of place from the vantage of the Wasatch Mountains

  • Increase Utahns’ awareness, care, and stewardship of the state’s unique natural landscapes

  • Support classroom science learning through experience, observation, and understanding

  • Foster appreciation for lifelong learning

  • Integrate and strengthen critical thinking skills, effective communication, and leadership

https://www.wasatchmountaininstitute.org/program

Utah's Every Kid in the Outdoors Initiative

Utah's Every Kid Outdoors (EKO) Initiative


This legislative initiative supports parents, educators, and youngsters by promoting fun outdoor activities to connect with nature. This website has a list of youth-focused organizations, EKO Resources, things for educators, and a list of their partnerships.

https://recreation.utah.gov/utah-outdoor-recreation-safety-education-access-economy/eko/

Teacher Ranger Teacher

Care to spend a summer working in a National Park? Be a Teacher Ranger Teacher!

The National Park Service Teacher Ranger Teacher (TRT) program is an extended professional development opportunity for educators from K-12 schools to learn about the resources and educational materials available through the National Park Service. Teachers participating in the Teacher Ranger Teacher program will have the opportunity to engage in parks and park resources, participate in a webinar about lesson planning, develop at least one lesson to be used in their classroom or school, assist the park with an education project, and increase their understanding of place-based learning. This program will offer teachers a unique opportunity to infuse their teaching skills with NPS-based Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education resources and the use of primary sources and place based learning. Administration of the program, professional development hours and graduate credit hours will be made available to participants through the University of Colorado, Denver (UC Denver) through a cooperative agreement.

The emphasis of this program is to link National Park units and teachers from schools with underserved student populations in urban and rural school districts. Teachers spend the summer learning, and sometimes also living in the park. They perform various tasks depending on their interests and the needs of the park that focus on education programs of the NPS. TRTs spend most of their time engaging with park education projects, learning about park resources, and developing lesson plans to use in their classrooms and in the park with students. Their experience will also include exposure to a variety of work performed in National Park units by employees from many career fields in the service. When TRTs return to the schools in the fall, they spend part of their classroom time presenting their TRT projects to their own students and to a wider education audience. These presentations can be connected to NPS outreach during National Park Week in April or at other times during the school year. In order to reach the greatest number of underserved students, parks are highly encouraged to recruit new teachers into the program each summer.

The Teacher Ranger Teacher Program is the centerpiece of a larger NPS Teacher Corps concept. The NPS Teacher Corps is an umbrella concept that incorporates all of the ways that educators interact with the NPS including, volunteerism, summer seasonal employees who are teachers, teacher workshops and professional development seminars, retired educators who work for or volunteer for the NPS, or park-based activities that include teacher involvement. The National Park Service through the NPS Teacher Corps wishes to acknowledge all of the ways that educators participate in the NPS education mission.

Program Goals

  • Increase outreach to underserved students by providing professional development training opportunity to their teachers.

  • Provide teachers with place-based learning experiences

  • Provide access to the rich resources of the national parks for inclusion into classrooms and schools

  • Provide teachers with new knowledge and teacher skills related to the resources and themes interpreted in the National Park Service

  • Provide parks with the expertise of teachers to inform and shape park education programs and services

PS- There is a position in Capitol Reef National Park!

teacherrangerteacher.org

Environmental Education PRO

In 2016 North American Association for Environmental Education launched eePRO, an online platform for professional development. Through eePRO, environmental education professionals and students from around the world network, discuss important topics, share resources and opportunities, and learn about the latest trends in environmental education. This innovative web portal is visited by thousands of educators each day.

On this webisite you can post and explore resources, opportunities, events, and jobs, join groups, and share your profile with the community.

eepro.naaee.org
naaee.org

Childhood By Nature

Childhood by Nature was designed to be a resource to help parents and caregivers return childhood back to nature. Our ideas and writing are based on peer-reviewed studies, news pieces, and ideas from a growing community of nature-seeking parents and caregivers. We hope to offer tips, ideas, information, and activities that can fit into modern-day family life, creating young naturalists along the way, or just sparking a curiosity for the natural world that will last a lifetime. We hope you find it useful as you join us on our mission of reuniting children with nature.

www.childhoodbynature.com

Natural Inquirer

The Natural Inquirer program produces a variety of science education materials for Pre-K through grade 12.
Natural Inquirer products are produced by the USDA Forest Service, FIND Outdoors, and partners.

For High School & Middle School

Natural Inquirer is a free science education journal written for middle through high school age students. In 1998, Natural Inquirer was created so that scientists could share their research with students. Each article follows the same format as a scientific journal article by including an Introduction, Methods, Findings, and Discussion section. Additionally, each article has a Meet the Scientist section, Thinking About Science section, Thinking About the Environment section, and a FACTivity. The FACTivity is a hands-on activity that reinforces a concept from the article. All articles are correlated to National Education Standards.


For Upper Elementary School Students

Investi-gator is a free science journal written for upper elementary level students. The journal follows the same format as Natural Inquirer just written at a different level. Currently, three editions of Investi-gator are available.


For PreK through 2nd Grade Students

The Natural Inquirer Reader series was developed to meet the needs of PreK through 2nd grade students. Each Reader focuses on one USDA Forest Service scientist and their research. Readers contain glossaries, activities, and are correlated to National Education Standards. Lesson plans are available online for the Readers. Additionally, a “Bee” A Scientist coloring book is available.


For Outdoor Education Facilities & Nonformal Education Settings

NSI: Nature Science Investigator was created as an outreach to nonformal education settings such as campgrounds and environmental education facilities. NSI introduces students to different types of natural resource scientists and then provides activities for the students to conduct activities similar to that type of scientist. For example, the students meet an ornithologist and then engage in a birding activity.

www.naturalinquirer.org

Wilderness Investigations

Created by the Arthur Carhartt National Wilderness Training Center, Wilderness Investigations is a wilderness-focused curriculum that includes classroom, field, and family components. This place-based, standards-correlated curriculum includes hands-on activities and service learning opportunities. Topics are focused on key elements of the Wilderness Act of 1964. Wilderness Investigations is subject-integrated and geared mainly to grades 3-4, 5-8 and high school.

https://carhart.wilderness.net/education/wilderness-investigations-education-program.php

The Nature Conservatory: Nature Lab

Learn about food and water sustainability, climate change, healthy cities, and how to protect natural resources. The Nature Lab contains multiple educator resources, including teaching guides and free kahoot reviews.  There is a 4-week calendar that teachers can give to students full of fun activities they can do at home! 

https://www.nature.org/en-us/about-us/who-we-are/how-we-work/youth-engagement/nature-lab/

Trout in the Classroom

Students Learn to See Connections Between the Trout, Water Resources, the Environment, and Themselves. 

Trout, Steelhead and Salmon in the Classroom (TIC or SIC) enhances science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics curriculums. Students study and raise trout from eggs to fingerlings (small fish) in a coldwater aquarium during the school year. It is a unique opportunity used to teach the relevance of watersheds. Where permitted, the program culminates with a field trip to a community stream, river, lake or pond where students release their fish into a state-approved location.

https://www.troutintheclassroom.org/

Crops in the Classroom

Explore—and taste—Utah’s crops! Utah Agriculture in the Classroom is highlighting specialty crops grown in Utah including tart cherries, peaches, pistachios, honey, and much more. Crops in the Classroom provides teachers with standards-based curriculum linked to health and nutrition, and the opportunity to introduce students to crops grown locally in Utah.

This 20-minute module is designed for teachers in Utah.*  Teachers who complete the module below will receive a Crops in a Box resource kit worth $150. Supplies are limited. Modules must be complete in order to receive a Crops in a Box resource kit. 

https://form.jotform.com/220247079621049

Agriculture in the Classroom

The mission of Agriculture in the Classroom is to "increase agricultural literacy through K-12 education." An agriculturally literate person is defined as "one who understands and can communicate the source and value of agriculture as it affects our quality of life." Agriculture in the Classroom (AITC) programs seek to improve student achievement by applying authentic, agricultural-based content as the context to teach core curriculum concepts in science, social studies, language arts and nutrition. By encouraging teachers to embed agriculture into their classroom, AITC cultivates an understanding and appreciation of the food and fiber system that we all rely on every day. AITC's vision that "agriculture is valued by all" is unique within the agricultural education community and positions itself as the lead organization to serve the full spectrum of K-12 formal education.

Agriculture in the Classroom offers curriculum, lesson plans, workshops, E-learning, grants, and more!

Utah Agriculture to the Classroom: https://utah.agclassroom.org/

Teacher Center: https://agclassroom.org/teacher/