EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021

(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)

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6/08/2017  |   11:30 AM - 11:45 AM   |  AN APPROACH TO TEACHING URBAN ECOLOGY TO STUDENTS OF THE ARTS USING LEAF PACKS.   |  301A

AN APPROACH TO TEACHING URBAN ECOLOGY TO STUDENTS OF THE ARTS USING LEAF PACKS.

Science courses are a new thing at RISD, and we are constantly experimenting with them, so to speak! Involving some artistic expression is often used—it is a method of communicating one’s understanding of concepts and analyses through visual, not verbal, means. For three years I have used leaf packs to conduct a modified version of the experimental protocol as a semester project in my course, Urban Ecology: How Wildlife Interacts with an Urbanizing Landscape. Constructing, setting up and collecting the leaf packs are hands-on activities that these students relish. The goal is to take the data that we collect and process as a class and, in small groups, spatially analyze the land-use surrounding the spots where we sampled. The spatial analyses must be quantitative, but are done in different ways, depending upon each group’s consensus on how to categorize land-use and quantify it—with or without any technological tools. They consider both elements together to form a hypothesis and ultimately a conclusion about the impacts of land-use on adjacent aquatic communities. Ultimately, we hope to produce infographics of our results for outreach programs.

  • C23 Education
  • C08 Urban Ecology
  • S11 Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Freshwater Science

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Presenters/Authors

Maria Aliberti-Lubertazzi (), RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN, MALIBERT@RISD.EDU;


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