Squeamish science
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Brown eyes flashing with excitement, 9-year-old Shanta
Purdy proudly held up her perfect find: the skull of a rat, complete with
two long, thin curving teeth.
The skull, she explained, came from the owl pellet she was studying.
She discovered that owls scoop up their prey and separate the edible
from the nonedible, which they spit out as pellets.
“I found out that owls have two stomachs,” Shanta said. “One is to
smoosh up all the food and the other is to keep bones and fur in.”
Shanta is one of nearly 400 Newport-Mesa Unified School District
students attending the summer science institute camp at Davis Education
Center in Costa Mesa.
The science institute, which rotates between life science, physical
science and earth science each year, is designed as a development program
for teachers, explained Charlene Metoyer, the principal of the camp.
There are a multitude of hands-on science experiments for children,
and the camp itself acts as a hands-on training for teachers.
“Elementary teachers are usually specialists in reading and math,”
Metoyer said. “This allows them to become more comfortable with science
lessons, which they are usually more timid with.”
For teachers, the institute started in June with intensive training
sessions Saturday.
When school let out, the children joined in, coming to camp Tuesday
through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon for three weeks.
The many science experiments conducted at the camp will be integrated
into teachers’ regular classroom lessons during the upcoming school year.
This year, the camp, which is open to all Newport-Mesa instructors
teaching kindergarten through sixth grade, drew 42 teachers from nearly
all 22 public elementary schools and several private schools.
Student applications from across the district totaled 800 before a
lottery was drawn to narrow the number to 400.
Having all signed up for the camp, very few students were squeamish
about dissecting squids or starfish, having snail races or even using
honey to get the snails to lick their fingers.
The life science camp this year will conclude with a trip to OCC
laboratories, where marine biology professors will walk students through
even more slimy experiments.
Some students can’t wait. In fact, 11-year-old John Dang on Thursday
did not want to give up his science project after it was complete.
“But I liked my squid,” said John, who was reluctant to throw out the
sea creature’s remains when the time came. “It was really fun because it
was really slimy. And I got a bunch of body parts.”
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