State DNR to present $1,000 grant to Conservation Teacher of Year

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SOCIAL CIRCLE – The Georgia Department of Natural Resources is again offering a $1,000 grant to a kindergarten through fifth-grade public or private school teacher in the state who demonstrates exceptional energy and innovation in teaching life sciences.

Science specialists covering those grade levels also can apply. The grant recipient will be recognized as the DNR Conservation Teacher of the Year.

Teachers who apply must use Georgia’s native animals, plants and habitats as the context for covering Georgia Standards of Excellence. Although the grant emphasizes life science, cross-curricular teaching is highly encouraged. Preference will be given to teachers who demonstrate creativity in project design and take learning outside, as well as for projects that could not be funded otherwise. Teaching can take place in person on school grounds or online.

“The outdoors is an ever-changing, real-world learning lab for a variety of subjects,” DNR outreach coordinator Linda May said. “Students are more engaged and focused as they observe and experience nature first-hand. The result is improved academic performance and well-being.”

The Conservation Teacher of the Year grant is coordinated by the Wildlife Conservation Section, part of DNR’s Wildlife Resources Division. Through education, research and management, the Wildlife Conservation Section works to safeguard Georgia’s native diversity of wild animals, plants and their habitats, while also striving to increase public enjoyment of the outdoors. Funding is provided by the section’s friends group, The Environmental Resources Network, better known as TERN.

The deadline to apply is Oct. 30. DNR will notify the grant winner by Nov. 10.

For more information about the Conservation Teacher of the Year grant, visit georgiawildlife.com/TeachingConservationGrant or contact May ([email protected], (706) 319-0211) or Anna Yellin ([email protected], (678) 459-8393).

GRANT AT A GLANCE:

— $1,000 grant to a Georgia K-5 public or private school teacher (including science specialists) who demonstrates exceptional energy and innovation in teaching life sciences.

— Provided by the Georgia DNR Wildlife Conservation Section and The Environmental Resource Network, or TERN, the section’s friends group.

— Deadline to apply: Oct. 30. Recipient announced by Nov. 10.

For more information, go to georgiawildlife.com/TeachingConservationGrant or contact May or Yellin.

Special Photo: Georgia DNR

Author

Except for a brief period, Albany Herald Editor Carlton Fletcher has been a newspaperman, working as Sports Writer/Columnist for the weekly Ocilla Star, as Sports Writer/Sports Editor with The Tifton Gazette, and as Sports Writer/Copy Editor/News Reporter/Features Editor and Editor of the paper. He has won numerous awards for sports, news, business and column writing, including a first-place Business Writing award in last year’s Georgia Press Association awards competition.

Read Carlton’s stories.

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