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How to Teach Nature Journaling

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The first-ever comprehensive book devoted to helping educators use nature journaling as an inspiring teaching tool to engage young people with wild places.In their workshops, John Muir Laws and Emi...
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  • 28 April 2020
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The first-ever comprehensive book devoted to helping educators use nature journaling as an inspiring teaching tool to engage young people with wild places.

In their workshops, John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren are often asked the how-tos of teaching nature journaling: how to manage student groups in the outdoors, teach drawing skills (especially from those who profess to have none), connect journaling to educational standards, and incorporate journaling into longer lessons. This book, expanding on the philosophy and methods of The Laws Guide to Nature Drawing and Journaling puts together curriculum plans, advice, and in-the-field experience so that educators of all stripes can leap into journaling with their students. The approaches are designed to work in a range of ecosystems and settings, and are suitable for classroom teachers, outdoor educators, camp counselors, and homeschooling parents.

Full-color illustrations and sample journal pages from notable naturalists show how to put each lesson into practice. Field-tested by over a hundred educators, this book includes dozens of activities that easily support the Common Core and the Next Generation Science Standards—and, just as important, it will show kids and mentors alike how to recognize the wonder and intrigue in their midst.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Heyday
Imprint: Heyday
Publication Date: 28 April 2020
ISBN: 9781597145008
Format: eBook
BISACs: EDUCATION / Teaching Methods & Materials / Science & Technology, Teachers’ classroom resources & material, NATURE / General, SCIENCE / Study & Teaching, ART / Study & Teaching, Nature & the natural world: general interest, Stationery items, Drawing and drawings in pencil, charcoal, crayon or pastel, Drawing and drawings in pen or brush and ink, The Arts: techniques and principles, Wildlife: birds & birdwatching: general interest, Educational: Arts, general, Educational: Biology
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“Engaging students in learning about nature is a compelling need in these turbulent times. Just as important is communicating clearly, precisely, and truthfully. Naturalists and educators John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren help teachers achieve these goals with How to Teach Nature Journaling. This is a wonderful response to educators' request for meaningful ways to implement contemporary standards. The book is useful, full of activities, and manageable for classroom teachers.”—Rodger W. Bybee, Executive Director, BSCS Science Learning (Retired)

“Imagine if every teacher taught nature journaling, every student spent enough time outside to fill a journal each year, and our kids were becoming writers, artists, and scientists all at once. I’d send my kid to that school. Thanks to Emilie Lygren and Jack Laws, we now have the vision and the tools to make this our reality.”—Craig Strang, Associate Director of Lawrence Hall of Science

“The writing, the illustrations, the demonstration of an intentional, informative, and wonderfully educational approach to nature journal writing—it's all here. From field activities with clear examples to an inquiry-based approach to learning, this book is a gem for educators, first-time journalers, and for the experienced naturalist as well. It's art, it's writing, it's education, it's science, naturally so.”—José González, Founder of Latino Outdoors

“Here is a natural way for parents and teachers to integrate the beauty and mystery of nature into the lives of children. The book itself is a work of art.”—Richard Louv, author of Our Wild Calling and Last Child in the Woods

“Nature journaling is the single most valuable tool and skill a teacher can possess and use to move the Next Generation Science Standards and environmental literacy forward in their school. You need to do this!”—Rob WadeScience & Outdoor Education Coordinator, Plumas Unified School District/Plumas County of Education

“This book beautifully demonstrates how nature journaling is a valuable, multidimensional approach to science. Through this work, students build neural pathways that enable different brain regions to communicate with each other, resulting in more flexible thinking and creative problem solving in all areas of life. This approach to nature journaling also offers students an excellent way to learn and practice a growth mindset through nature and science.”—Jo Boaler, Professor of Education and Equity, Stanford University; co-founder and faculty director of youcubed.org; and author of several books including Mathematical Mindsets and Limitless Mind

John (Jack) Muir Laws is a principal leader and innovator of the worldwide nature journaling movement. Jack is a scientist, educator, and author, who helps people forge a deeper and more personal connection with nature through keeping illustrated nature journals and understanding science. His work intersects science, art, and mindfulness. Trained as a wildlife biologist and an associate of the California Academy of Sciences, he observes the world with rigorous attention. He looks for mysteries, plays with ideas, and seeks connections in all he sees. Attention, observation, curiosity, and creative thinking are not gifts, but skills that grow with training and deliberate practice. As an educator and author, Jack teaches techniques and supports routines that develop these skills to make them a part of everyday life.

Laws has written and illustrated several books including How to Teach Nature Drawing and Journaling (2020), The Laws Guide to Nature Drawing and Journaling (2016), The Laws Guide to Drawing Birds (2012), Sierra Birds: a Hiker’s Guide (2004), The Laws Guide to the Sierra Nevada (2007), and The Laws Pocket Guide Set to the San Francisco Bay Area (2009), all published by Heyday. He is a regular contributor to Bay Nature magazine with his “Naturalists Notebook” column.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Foreword by Amy Tan

INTRODUCTION
  • Why We Teach Nature Journaling
  • Why Nature Journaling?
  • You Can Do This, and It Is Worth It MANAGING THE OUTDOOR CLASSROOM
  • Taking Students Outside
  • How to Lead Journaling Activities
  • Nature Journaling In Different Contexts THE NATURE JOURNAL QUICKSTART GUIDE

    NATURE JOURNALING ACTIVITIES
  • GETTING STARTED: INTRODUCTORY JOURNALING TECHNIQUES AND ACTIVITIES
  • Use Words, Pictures, and NumbersMix It Up
  • I NOTICE, I WONDER, IT REMINDS ME OF
  • MY SECRET PLANT
  • TO EACH ITS OWN
  • COMPARISON
  • ZOOM IN, ZOOM OUT OBSERVATION AND NATURAL HISTORY
  • Look Big, Look Small
  • Make Comparisons and Study Categories
  • Get Lost in Wonder
  • COLLECTION OR FIELD GUIDE
  • TIMELINE
  • STRING SAFARI
  • ANIMAL ENCOUNTERS
  • SPECIES ACCOUNT
  • FOREST KARAOKE: TRANSCRIBING BIRDSONG
  • SOUNDSCAPE MAPS

    INQUIRY, INVESTIGATION, AND SCIENTIFIC THINKING
  • Intentional Curiosity and Inquiry
  • The Crosscutting Concepts
  • Who, What, Where, When, How, and Why
  • International Baccalaureate Key Concepts
  • How Do You Answer Your Questions?
  • Ask Questions and Think Like a Scientist
  • Practiced Precision
  • Nature Puzzles
  • Follow Curiosity Chains
  • MYSTERIES AND EXPLANATIONS
  • QUESTIONING QUESTIONS
  • MAPPING
  • LANDSCAPE CROSS SECTION
  • PHENOMENON MODEL
  • TEAM OBSERVATION

    WORDS: ARTICULATED THOUGHT AND STORYTELLING
  • Writing
  • Find Poems within and around You
  • Reflect, Connect, and Find Joy
  • Practice Scientific Storytelling
  • What Pictures Cannot Show
  • WRITING TO OBSERVE, WRITING TO THINK
  • EVENT COMIC
  • EVENT MAP
  • POETRY OF PLACE AND MOMENT
  • SIT SPOT

    PICTURES: DRAWING AND VISUAL THINKING
  • Drawing
  • Observational Drawing, Step-by-Step
  • Building New Skills: Basic Drawing Exercises
  • Drawing Tricks and Tips: Instruction for Students
  • Page Structure and Layout
  • THINK WITH PICTURES
  • BALANCING FLEXIBILTY AND STRUCTURE
  • LOOK, AND LOOK AGAIN
  • INSIDE OUT
  • NATURE BLUEPRINTS
  • INFOGRAPHIC
  • PHOTO, PENCIL, AND FOUND-OBJECT COLLAGE

    NUMBERS: QUANTIFICATION AND MATHEMATICAL THINKING
  • Numbers and Quantification
  • Making Quantification Tool Kits
  • SHOW WHERE THE NUMBERS COME FROM
  • USE NUMBERS TO FIND THE PATTERN
  • HIDDEN FIGURES
  • BIODIVERSITY INVENTORY
  • TIMED OBSERVATIONS
  • CHANGE OVER TIME

    INCORPORATING JOURNALING INTO LESSONS, FRAMEWORKS, AND ASSESSMENTS
  • Journaling Over Time
  • Developing Skills: Ideas, Practice, and Feedback
  • Grading and Evaluation
  • Evaluation Rubric
  • From Activities to Longer Lessons
  • Journaling and Education Standards
  • Teaching Science and Inquiry: A Deeper Dive

    FINAL THOUGHTS

    APPENDICES
  • Tools and Materials
  • Activity Summaries and Possible Phenomena
  • NGSS Connections
  • Evaluation Rubric
  • Cut-and-Paste Nature Journal Essentials
  • Cut-and-Paste Quantification Tool Kit

    Notes

    Acknowledgements

    About the Naturalist Journal Contributors

    About the Authors