Youngsters can benefit from Wildsight’s various educational programs that have now moved online as a result of the pandemic. Photo Submitted

Youngsters can benefit from Wildsight’s various educational programs that have now moved online as a result of the pandemic. Photo Submitted

Wildsight turns a sour situation into sweet online learning

The group is offering a variety of resources for home learning

  • Jun. 29, 2020 12:00 a.m.

A barrel of lemons landed on the Wildsight education team’s heads when coronavirus kicked traditional education to the curb.

How to deliver education programming when schools were closed and social distancing was in place? The team rolled up their sleeves and started squeezing those lemons into something as wonderful as a tall, cool glass of lemonade on a hot summer day.

Wildsight created dozens of online lessons, including activities, videos and more, that simplified complex ideas and turned them into fun educational experiences. But the Education in the Wild program, geared for students from kindergarten to grade seven, was not the only education programming they transformed into an online experience. Visit the Wildsight website for an in-depth, nine lesson series from Know Your Watershed educators, which turned the overflowing well of knowledge about watersheds into compact lesson plans.

Beyond Recycling educators also created resources for home learning. Lessons, videos and eco-challenges were offered through the website, focusing on supporting teachers and students who were already participating in the year long program. Student resource pages on the website were also added, with supplemental information for self directed learning and for kids who want to learn more.

If you’re looking for summer activities now for your own kids, check out the online offerings! For Wildsight, this experience proved the age old adage; when life hands you lemons, you truly can make something sweet out of it.

Wildsight thanks Columbia Basin Trust, Columbia Power Corporation, Consecon Foundation, Crowsnest Conservation Society, Fortis BC, NSERC, Osprey Community Foundation, the RDCK, Teck Coal, Teck Trail, the province of British Columbia and all of our individual donors for making this program possible.


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