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Earth Team Volunteers
Updated
06/05/2008
Mary
Ann Sharp, District Conservationist in the Danville Field Office and Boyle
County High School teacher, Jamie Hester coordinate a water watch group with
Earth Team Volunteers. The water watch group has been in existence since the fall
of 2003.
This group consists of students from the Boyle
County High School and fourth graders from the Woodlawn Elementary
School. The high school students are matched with three or four fourth
graders. Every year the group conducts monthly water sampling along
Clark’s Run Creek.
Clark’s Run is a major tributary of Herrington Lake
which is the drinking water source for Danville residents as well as a
major recreational lake for the central Kentucky region.
Led by teachers Jamie Hester, Kristina Grubb, and Tonya
Lynch, the elementary students rotate between work stations hosted by high
school students so that each 4th grader can assess three water quality
components with the help and guidance of their partnering high school student.
The high school students participate as part of their
environmental course curriculum and the fourth graders are introduced to their
working environment.
The students' learning experience includes the use of
Kentucky Division of Water's assessment worksheets as well as activities that
include a biological assessment which the students refer to as a "good and bad
bug count" and a simple chemical testing of the water.
The group sends monthly sampling results to interested
local agencies such as the Boyle County Conservation District, NRCS, and the
Division of Water (DOW). Their data is used by DOW and others in a local effort
to develop a watershed plan for the Hanging Fork and Clark's Run watershed.
The students, both high school and elementary, formally
present their findings to these agencies at least once a year. Their yearly
compilations and presentations reinforce the water quality concepts learned as
well as educate the public about the quality of water in Clark’s Run.
This experience leaves the students with a lasting
impression of water quality issues. The actual "hands-on" of collecting and
evaluating the water, allows the students to be more environmentally conscious
and aware of their environment and of non-point source pollution issues. This group is a valuable asset to the community by
providing data that paints a picture of the local water quality and by making
the community aware of that information.
This community awareness gained by the efforts of
this group is leading to changes in personal behavior that will improve
the overall quality of water in Clark’s Run and eventually Herrington
Lake.
Ms. Sharp gives all the credit to the local
teachers for keeping this group organized and making it such a success
however, without the “behind the scenes” efforts of Ms. Sharp, this
group may not have been created or maintained. Choosing sampling sites
safe for the younger children and the proximity to the school,
arrangements with local property owners willing to allow students access
to the sites, and above all funding. The funding aspect was eventually
made easier when Ms. Sharp explained to the local Conservation District
Board the enthusiastic efforts of the students and the valuable
information that was being obtained by the group.
The local Board not only provided money for them
for one year but included the Water Watch group as a line item in
their budget each year for as long as the group stays active.
Ms. Sharp’s use of this group as Earth
Team Volunteers not
only is a major plus for NRCS in terms of the data obtained of local water
quality, she has also created a way to educate our future community leaders
about natural resource conservation and preservation in a fun and exciting way.
NRCS salutes the three dedicated teachers involved, Jamie Hester, high school
teacher and mastermind behind this group; Tonya Lynch and Kristina Grubb, 4th
grade teachers at Woodlawn Elementary and of course the dedicated students
coordinated by the local district conservationist, Mary Ann Sharp. As the group
edges toward its next year, there will be students who first participated as
grade school students will now have the chance to teach the next generation of
four graders.
To join the Earth Team go to
Who can Volunteer
or contact your
local NRCS office
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