
(ARA) - Teaching is now competing with testing, leaving less classroom time for
hands-on, experienced-based learning. With record debt -- upwards of $200 billion -- and
school funding dependent on compliance and performance, programs promoting creative
thinking have become unaffordable luxuries.
Its not just P.E. hours and pencil allotments being cut, says
Susan Singer, president and founder of Field Trip Factory (FTF), a company which provides
free, experiential learning adventures to U.S. schools. Were seeing less
active learning in classrooms despite research showing a direct correlation between the
learners involvement and learning retention. Studies have demonstrated 40 to
60 percent increases in retention when students have an opportunity to test previously
learned facts and theories, revise assumptions, and derive new and first-hand knowledge.
The growing success of Singers company is a testament to the overwhelming
demand for creative, affordable ways to reinforce curriculums and engage all kinds of
learners. Last year, Field Trip Factory took 200,000 pre-K through 8th grade students out
of the classroom -- into the field -- to teach lessons in nutrition, fitness, creative
problem-solving, teamwork, eye science, biology, recycling and geography.
Students were able to taste their way up the Food Pyramid, suit up with sports
safety gear, plan birthday parties using time and budget allotments, examine the
similarities linking living beings, and much more. According to Chicago public school
teacher and field trip participant, Mee Soohoo, The interaction between the students
and the community professionals on-the-job had a real impact on students learning
and behavior. In a survey done following a recent nutrition field trip, student
participants reported eating 38 percent healthier and increasing their consumption of
nutritious foods by 12 to 18 percent.
This past spring, 600 schools signed-up for FTFs new in-school Creative Break
program, which promotes self-expression and creative problem-solving, while supporting
cross-curricular instruction. Teachers embraced the Breaks art-based, no wrong
answer activities and students eagerly exchanged their number two pencils for
colored markers.
Interest in experiential learning has ebbed and flowed since the late 19th century,
but is growing by leaps and bounds today. Cost has always been a consideration but now
Singer and Field Trip Factory have taken that consideration off the table. Educational
psychologists support hands-on learning not only for learners whod be left behind by
traditional classroom instruction, but for all students. In an ever-changing, highly
competitive global market, children must be readied to apply flexible, creative strategies
to practical, real-world problems.
For more information about any of Field Trip Factorys programs, call (800)
987-6409 or visit the website at: www.fieldtripfactory.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content
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