From the upgraded research, completed by Monarch Joint Venture, the Western Monarchs appear to be the same variety as the Eastern Monarchs.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Citizen Science: Monarch Butterfly Webinar
From the upgraded research, completed by Monarch Joint Venture, the Western Monarchs appear to be the same variety as the Eastern Monarchs.
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Thursday, April 28, 2016
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Labels: American Education, best practices, biodiversity, biological systems, biology, citizen science, collaboration education, Dr. Chip Taylor, Journey North, Monarch Joint Venture, Monarch Watch, science
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
A Wee Post About Journey North
Image by ccmerino via FlickrMany of my colleagues at Diigo share marvelous bookmarks that relate to various hands-on and outdoor teaching categories, and Tami Brass shared a great resource,Group Recipes. She and I discussed other websites to help teachers in these hands-on subjects enter the Web2.0 world.
She mentioned other teachers interested in golf and another who is a voluteer in a nature center and intereseted in raptors who could be introduced to Web2.0. While I couldn't help out with the golfers, I realized one of my favorite science networks, Journey North would give the raptor afficionado as starting place to see the value of online learning networks.
Here is my introduction from Diigo:
Can't help with the golfers, but one the oldest and most respected wildlife migration and habitat study groups is Journey North.
They have an entire section of work with a variety of animals, including RAPTORS, whales, Monarch butterflies, and many others. Journey North organizers present cool science projects like the tulip growing, Mystery Classroom, etc for classes to join. A teacher can pick as few or as many of these project as they want to participate in.
While the Journey North project started as a way to study the Monarch butterfly migration in North America, it has gone global. Kids and teachers in classes all over the world participate in many of the activities like Mystery Classroom and Tulip Growing(phenology) experiments.
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Tuesday, June 24, 2008
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Labels: biology, education, Journey North, nature, phenology, PLN, Postcard Geography Project, professional development, raptors, web2.0