Elementary students from the Kent School District schools explore ecosystems with Woodland Park Zoo education staff during their Wild Wise: Ready, Set, Discover program. COURTESY PHOTO, Ryan Hawk/Woodland Park Zoo

Elementary students from the Kent School District schools explore ecosystems with Woodland Park Zoo education staff during their Wild Wise: Ready, Set, Discover program. COURTESY PHOTO, Ryan Hawk/Woodland Park Zoo

Kent Elementary students complete hands-on science program with Woodland Park Zoo

  • Thursday, March 30, 2017 12:09pm
  • News

The Woodland Park Zoo just completed a five-month-long partnership with Kent Elementary School to provide students with hands-on science education, teaching students about conservation and local wildlife.

The program – called Ready, Set, Discover – could be expanded to more schools through Access for All, a proposed ballot measure to increase funding for arts, science and heritage education for public school students, program officials said.

If approved by the King County Council, voters would get a chance to decide on this August’s ballot, program officials said.

Through the Ready, Set, Discover program with Kent Elementary and 13 other elementary schools in the district (nearly 1,100 students total), zoo naturalists spent time with students during field trips to Woodland Park Zoo and outdoor exploration trips to local wetlands researching amphibians and their habitats.

At the end of the program, students give a presentation on a solution for improving habitats for amphibians and are asked to explain how all of the program experiences contributed to their research. Program officials say it’s a valuable learning experience for students and teaches kids important research, science and presentation skills beyond just wildlife conservation.

At the conclusion of their presentation, each student also receives four zoo passes to bring their families to the zoo at a later date. For many of these families, this is the first opportunity to visit the zoo.

Over the last decade, public funding for arts and culture education across the state has been cut in half, program officials said. Access for All would reverse that trend, expanding access to diverse learning experiences for students from low-income and middle-class families throughout King County, program officials said. If approved by voters, it would raise the county sales tax by 0.1 percent – one penny for every $10 spent – and provide funding for increase access and public education at more than 300 arts, science and heritage institutions across the county, program officials said.

Access for All would also allow many of the region’s major institutions, like the zoo, to expand free and reduced-price ticket programs for families.


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