Featured Educators

Echo Horizon School
7 Years of PigeonWatch Participation!
Seven years ago Echo Horizon School, in Culver City, California,
began to participate in Project PigeonWatch. PigeonWatch became an
integral part of the second grade science curriculum.

Throughout the last seven years, teachers Anita Melnick and Roz
Henderson have created a wonderful partnership with the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology. They have used PigeonWatch to involve families in their
children's science education, and have found creative solutions to
difficult problems (at first they couldn't find ANY pigeons).

This year Echo Horizon school even submitted their data through our
online data entry system. Parent volunteers worked carefully with Urban
Bird Studies to find the best way to enter all the data collected by
the students and their families!

Urban Bird Studies staff continues to learn all about the difficulties
and rewards of involving classrooms in meaninful citizen science
participation through our partnership with Echo Horizon School.
Thank you Echo Horizon School teachers and students !

Anita Melnick , second grade teacher, writes,
"The two second grade classes at Echo Horizon School in Culver City, California have been Pigeon Watching for the last 5 years. This wonderful study, conducted by scientists at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, provides the opportunity for our students and their families to become citizen scientists. This project enhances the children's observation and recording skills and fully involves them in a research project conducted by Cornell University. To embark on this adventure the children view a video, prepared by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, that enables them to full understand this project. The students then ask questions and discuss how they will go about completing their assignment. After the movie and discussion the children participate in a simulated pigeon watch, using signs with the names of the many pigeons they hope to observe. A letter is sent home to their parents to insure that they understand this important project. It is explained that Pigeon Watching can be done on the weekends as a family activity or with others in the class as a group project. Observations may take place one time or several times. The first step of this project is to find pigeons! A number of places around our city are suggested as good places to find pigeon sites. The children are all given tally sheets, prepared by Cornell, to record the number and types of pigeons they observe. They are given small posters with the different colors pictured to facilitate easy identification. After the tally sheets come back to school the data is transferred to the Data forms and sent back to Cornell. Science is an important part of the curriculum at Echo Horizon School and our second graders love this opportunity to participate in an ongoing scientific study. When they return to school with their completed tally sheets you can feel their excitement and enthusiasm. It is delightful to hear how they creatively solved the problems of where to find flocks of pigeons, how they lured them down from buildings with bread crumbs and how they figured out if a particular pigeon was a blue-bar or a pied!"
