Teaching the magic of nature to Clallam’s second-graders

PORT ANGELES — The latest stop on the Clallam County Master Gardeners’ 2005 North Olympic Peninsula tour of second-grade classrooms brought the green to Franklin Elementary School on Wednesday morning.

Several volunteers — most of them retired teachers — wore green Master Gardeners shirts as they led a series of presentations designed for second-graders that focus mainly on the magic of how plants grow and their critical role to man’s survival.

“We want to get the students interested in things that are real, things that are living,” said Shirley Honore, a retired teacher who showed a group of Franklin Elementary students to plant their own seeds.

“We want the students to get involved in something that doesn’t happen in an instant and gets them outdoors at the same time.”

Watching seeds grow

One project that is designed to grab students’ long-term interest is watching how seeds grow over several weeks.

After viewing an educational show by Master Gardeners volunteer Susan Erzen and featuring “Herbie” the puppet illustrating the life cycle of plants and flowers, students were broken up into different groups.

Then volunteers provided them with plastic cups, soil and five different kinds of seeds — bean, pea, corn, sunflower seed and radish.

“Now what’s the difference between dirt and soil?” one volunteer asked the children before the hands-on project began.

“Soil has nutrients that helps plants grow.”

The students nodded in approval and examined the clear plastic cup before them.

They then proceeded to fill their cups with prepared soil and placed seeds in them, from which they will be able to watch the plants grow over time.

“I love peas and corn,” said one student as she watered her cup.

More in News

John Brewer.
Remembrance event set next month for John Brewer

Former publisher, editor was in charge of Peninsula Daily News for 17 years

Smoke rises on Tuesday morning from the site of a baled cardboard fire that broke out late Monday night at the McKinley Paper Company on Marine Drive in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
No injuries following fire at McKinley paper mill

The Port Angeles Fire Department responded to a fire… Continue reading

August Gala, 2, of Port Angeles spins an idle wheel of a truck belonging to Bruch & Bruch Construction during Saturday’s Touch a Truck event at Queen of Angeles School in Port Angeles. The event, hosted by the school’s parent-teacher organization, allowed youngsters and adults to visit and climb aboard a variety of construction, public safety and utility vehicles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Touch a Truck

August Gala, 2, of Port Angeles spins an idle wheel of a… Continue reading

Man who allegedly broke into Brinnon homes with rifle to be in court

Coccia, 44, arrested by Mason County sheriff’s deputies

Port of Port Angeles reports strong March revenue

Marine trades site ready for contractor to install utilities

Chef to speak at Studium Generale East

Chef Arran Stark will present a healthy cooking demonstration… Continue reading

Two-lane bypass to be paved Tuesday night

Work crews will begin paving a two-lane bypass near Discovery… Continue reading

Woman recovered off Neah Bay coast identified

A woman who was recovered from the water a… Continue reading

Noah Glaude, executive director of the North Olympic Library System, welcomes a crowd to the ceremonial groundbreaking of the Sequim Library expansion on Wednesday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim library breaks ground

3,800-square-foot expansion expected to be complete by spring 2025

Citizen of the Year Susie Brandelius with the Forks Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Lissy Andros, who caught up with Brandelius on Monday to present her award and flowers. (Christi Baron/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Forks chamber celebrates community awards

Citizen, volunteer, business of the year lauded

Flight operations set for this week

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading