Learning to love a Northwest icon
By studying salmon, students develop an attachment to it and the cultures supported by it for so many centuries.
By Laura Bogar and Jaya Ghosh | The Seattle Times | September 25, 2008
STUDENTS of the Seattle Public Schools study salmon every year. And many resent every moment of it.
Why, we wondered, learn the difference between the hooknosed sockeye
and the unassuming pink? Who cares about the adipose fin? The salmon
are gone, why on Earth should we care?
The idea of requiring students to study salmon is, of course, to
allow students to befriend this sodden enigma and develop an attachment
to it and the cultures supported by it for so many centuries. But often
students don't grasp this connection.
From our experience, it's difficult for students to develop a
connection to salmon or to the Pacific coastal region until they are
provided opportunities for deeper involvement. The Student Conservation
Association (SCA) provides such opportunities. SCA is a national
nonprofit group that seeks to link high-school students with
conservation efforts. As selected members of SCA's Conservation
Leadership Corps in high school, our involvement left us with knowledge
of our region's ecology and a loyalty to all things Northwest.
That knowledge comes at a price. It means waking
up at 7:30 on drizzly Saturday mornings. Dragging yourself out of bed
on a Saturday morning could lead to spending the day pulling invasive
species out of parks or improving trails. As the day moves on, you
realize what a good time you're having getting dirty amid the fresh
scent of the firs. When you're done with the work, you rest assured
that more adventures are still to come: With the SCA, we have
participated in nature hikes, river tours and rock climbing.
The difference between our SCA experiences and the well-intentioned
diagrams of salmon fins in the classroom was the element of hands-on
engagement that we received. With the SCA, we got dirt under our
fingernails!
We can now remember the names of favorite plants more often than the
names of casual acquaintances. The muddied hair and nettled ankles of
our work have given us a reason to care about the Earth, about our
region and, yes, about salmon. Being part of the SCA surrounded us with
a vibrant community that values these things, and now we do, as well.
People often ask, "Why do you spend your time working in the dirt?"
The answer wasn't always easy to come up with, but when thinking of
past crews, our response makes more sense. It's not for the service
hours for graduation or to help with college applications or the chance
to get away from our parents, but the incredible sense of
accomplishment that comes from pushing ourselves to new, seemingly
impossible limits. It's easy to see how we have grown over these past
years by dedicating ourselves to the work.
The days of filling wheelbarrows seemed hard at the time, but now we
know we are capable of much more. The most touching moments always came
at the end of a workday, walking along a new trail or beautified space,
laid with our own strong hands and spirits.
We don't mean to petition against sleeping till noon on Saturdays or
spending hours listening to iPods. We do both — often. But more exists
out there.
Students everywhere are entering a new phase of their lives, perhaps
off to college or starting at a new school. It's important to remember
that we may never be able to convince ourselves that salmon anatomy
really matters.
But if we make a point of being contributors to life rather than
observers, it will be a lot easier to find significance in the lessons
about our world, whether we learn them from the plastic seat of a
classroom desk or out in nature.
Laura Bogar majors in biology at Lewis & Clark College in
Portland, Ore. Jaya Ghosh pursues environmental studies at Middlebury
College in Vermont. Both have spent four years working in the SCA.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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