Careers
   
   
   
  Garden Detectives


  Caring about the plants and animals begins with knowing their names. 

  This is the idea behind the Garden Detectives program, now in its fourth year at    
  Seth Boyden. The program was created by Jane Conrad, a parent at Seth 
  Boyden, who compiled picture binders featuring over 150 species of trees, 
  shrubs, flowers, weeds, birds, butterflies and insects present in the school yard
  where children play. 

  The program is available on a "drop-in" basis to all children at the school during  
  their recess periods in spring and fall. During recess, children (the Garden
  Detectives) leaf through these binders and choose which items they'd like to   
  hunt for that day. Parent volunteers are on hand to assist children, or to lead  
  impromptu tours or hunts according to their own inclinations.  Kids record their
  findings by drawing and writing about them in their 20-page Field Notebook,
  complete with fold-out map of the schoolyard. 

  When a child fills their book with 20 finds, the school principal awards them a  
  Garden Detective Badge (more awards are available for additional finds).  A set 
  of the picture binders is also available to all teachers to use in lessons.

  While hunting for things, Garden Detectives get lots of practice looking closely at
  plants and insects and seeing them change over time.  Doing this leads to  
  amazing discoveries - for instance that apple blossoms are followed by tiny fruit
  you can see growing right on the tree, or that boy Cabbage White butterflies look
  different from girl Cabbage Whites.  The Garden Detectives program helps keep
  the schoolyard "alive" by familiarizing everyone with the natural world around
  them every day.