BlogWalker

Muddling through the blogosphere

Prairie Elementary Filmmakers Save a Regional Nature Program

| 3 Comments

I was there – at the Sacramento Board of Directors – on Wednesday, joining other concerned educators and citizens in a last minute effort to save one of Sacramento’s primo science programs:  Splash.

Splash-Channel3

Thanks to Splash, thousands of elementary, middle, and high school students have explored life in Sacramento’s streams and, in the process, have come to understand why taking care of our water supply is so vital to the community. However, the Board was ready to eliminate the program as part of their latest round of budget cuts.

We had our chance to speak out, each person being allotted 3 minutes to justify continued funding for the program.  With Splash director Eva Butler leading the charge, I think the 12 of us who took our turns at the podium helped provide the Board members with an understanding and appreciation that for most kids, “Splash is their first experience with relevant science and things that live beyond the pavement in Sacramento’s streams and vernal pools.”

But it was clearly a team of 5th grade filmmakers from Prairie Elementary School (Lesley McKillop’s former 4th graders) who saved the program.  In less than 2 minutes, their Saving Splash video (see snippets in the above TV coverage) provided a compelling argument that led to a unanimous vote to save the program.

A huge victory for students all over the Sacramento region – and a powerful lesson to our young filmmakers on the importance of taking a stand and the power of media to sway an audience.

3 Comments

  1. Pingback: Prairie Elementary Filmmakers Save a Regional Nature Program « Generation YES Blog

  2. Pingback: How 5th-graders stole show, saved ‘Splash’ | NetFamilyNews.org

  3. Pingback: How 5th-graders stole show, saved 'Splash' - Connect Safely

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *.


Skip to toolbar