The students looked for butterflies in the alfalfa hay field behind the school and a small pasture of grass and milkweed nearby along Hardscrabble Road. After finding and catching a butterfly using a butterfly net, the students would carefully hold the butterfly with insect forceps, and, with a partner, take a photo with a digital camera and record information such as the species, gender and habitat preference of the butterfly. The students would then tag the butterfly in order to assist in the tracking of the insect.
Isaiah with a butterfly in the net.
Quinn with Schuyler who holds a Clouded Sulphur butterfly with insect forceps.
Lena records observations.
A Monarch is tagged.
Lena, Nadine and Xzavia watch a monarch butterfly emerge from its chrysalis in the classroom.
A butterfly emerges.
The class contacted students in the central mountainous region of Mexico, the area to which Monarch butterflies migrate for the winter. The Red Cedar students sent symbolic Monarchs and letters of appreciation to students in the Michoacan region, thanking them for protecting the remaining twelve Monarch sanctuaries. The symbolic Monarchs represent a tremendous international effort to support Monarch butterfly conservation.
At the end of the project, the students shared their learning with the rest of the school and their parents, presenting their findings through tables with recorded data, writing, photographs and oral presentation
Jez and Lena share their learning with other students.
Bo shares his display on the life cycle of a butterfly.
The class with teacher Brendan Collins