Making the most of community resources
and field trips
2. Preplanning with Others Joining the
Trip:
Other
people accompanying the group need to be oriented on the objectives, route,
behavior standards required of everyone so they can help enforce these
standard. These may be parents who will assist teachers, other teachers and/or
school administrator staff.
3. Taking the field trip:
·
Distribute route map of
places to be observed.
·
Upon arriving at the
destination, teacher should check the group and introduce the guide.
·
Special effort should
be made to ensure that:
-
the trip keeps the time schedule
-
the students have the
opportunity to obtain answers to questions
-
the group participates
courteously in the entire trip
-
the guide sticks
closely to the list of questions.
3. Post- field trip follow- up
activities:
·
Provide time for
students to share general observations and reactions to field trip experiences
·
Share specific
assignments students completed while on the field trip.
·
Create a classroom
bulletin board displaying materials developed or collected while on the field
trip.
·
Develop a classroom
museum that replicates and extends displays students observed on the field trip
·
Link field trip
activities to multiple curricular areas.
·
Share and evaluate
student assignments/activities from the Field Book.
·
Have the class compose
and send thank-you letters to the field trip site host, chaperones, school
administrators and other persons that supported the field trip. Include favourite
objects or special information learned during the field trip.
·
Create a short news
report about what happened on the field trip. Publicize the trip via an article
in your local newspaper, school bulletin board, trip presentation for parent's
night, or class Web page.
Evaluating Field Trip:
These
are the questions we can ask after the field trip to evaluate the field trip.
·
Could the same benefits
be achieved by other materials? Was it worth the time, effort, and perhaps
extra money?
·
Were there any
unexpected problems which could be foreseen another time? Were these due to
guides, students, poor planning, or unexpected trip conditions?
·
Were new interests
developed?
·
Should the trip be
recommended to other classes studying similar topics?

