“Salmon Parents are Amazing!” Video
Runtime 4:50 Kid-friendly video about salmon life cycle; best for younger students.
Runtime 4:50 Kid-friendly video about salmon life cycle; best for younger students.
Runtime 5:37 Short animated overview of salmon life cycle.
Runtime: 3:47 Quick general video. Good graphics about percentage of salmon that survive and explanation of nutrient cycling.
Runtime: 13:17 Documentary-style info about Chum; male vs female, general lifecycle, great footage of spawning behaviors. Good explanation and footage of how ocean derived nutrients work.
Runtime: 9:05 Engaging, kid-friendly lifecycle from the POV of a coho salmon.
This video features employees at Taylor Shellfish detailing how ocean acidification affects the oysters, and thus, their business and lives.
This animated video shows students how ocean acidification affects shellfish (and humans!)
In this activity, students make comparisons between unrelated objects through metaphors to learn the functions of a wetland.
Below are the Safety Data Sheets for each of the chemicals included in our Water Quality Monitoring kits. Dissolved Oxygen Manganous Sulfate Alkine Potassium Iodide Sulfuric Acid Starch Indicator Sodium Thiosulfate Nitrates Nitrate #1 tablet Nitrate #2 tablet pH pH indicator solution Turbidity Standard Turbidity reagent
Many factors contribute to Sea Level Rise. Learn more here!
This online lesson provides perspectives from Native American community members and their supporters, images, news footage, an interactive timeline, and other sources about an important campaign to secure the treaty rights and sovereignty of Native Nations of the Pacific Northwest. Explore the many actions Native Nations took to address injustices.
In this activity, students will learn and/or practice microscopy technique, while sorting freshwater macroinvertebrates by order, ultimately using the invertebrates to make a claim about the health of a wetland.
This lab walks you through fecal coliform testing, an important part of water quality monitoring!
In this activity, students use maps to characterize what a watershed is; to identify the key parts and functions of watersheds; to determine watershed boundaries; to discover how watersheds are named; and to describe how water flows in a watershed based on elevation.
In this activity, you and your fellow players are the leaders—citizens, policymakers, business leaders, nonprofit leaders, and researchers—of a coastal city. Your job is to make smart decisions that will increase the city’s resilience to climate change.
In this two part activity, students will first be introduced to the water cycle and discover how water moves through a system. In the second part, students will engineer a solution to the problem of pollution entering our water bodies.
The Game of Floods is a small group activity, with 4-6 participants tasked with developing a vision for ‘Marin Island 2050,’ a hypothetical landscape that highlights the conditions that will be experienced in Marin in coming years with sea level rise and increased storm impacts causing the loss or deterioration […]
This activity provides an opportunity for students to investigate how thermal expansion of water affects sea level rise. The suggested lab activity allows students to observe and describe the change in water level in a container when the water is exposed to heat.
The Nisqually River Delta in Washington State provides a model of river estuary restoration and a hopeful message about our environment. This puzzle provides a hands-on learning activity for adults and children to visualize the impact of removing 100-year-old agricultural dikes at the Nisqually Delta on salmon and the thousands […]
The Bridge Ocean Science Education Resource Center is an ever-growing collection of the best marine education materials available online. The Bridge provides educators with a convenient source of accurate and useful information on global, national, and regional marine science topics, and gives research scientists a contact point for broader impacts […]
Low or depleted oxygen in a water body often leads to ‘dead zones ‘— regions where life cannot be sustained. Visit this webpage to learn more about hypoxia!
What is pH and how does carbon dioxide released from the burning of fossil fuels increase the acidity of the ocean? Students explore the answers to these questions in this two-part lab investigation.
Harmful algal blooms, dead zones, and fish kills are the results of a process called eutrophication—which begins with the increased load of nutrients to estuaries and coastal waters. Learn more about eutrophication by visiting this webpage!
Dungeness crab is a valuable species throughout the national marine sanctuaries of the West Coast from Washington state to throughout California. This communication toolkit is designed for educators and communicators to use to teach others about the impact of ocean acidification on Dungeness crab. The toolkit includes: fact sheet; infographic; […]
Use these six colorful natural history posters of different animal habitats for many fun activities at home or in the classroom!
After collecting a sample of benthic macroinvertebrates, use this pollution tolerance index (or Benthic Index of Biological Integrity) to determine the health of the water! Comes in a printable or virtual Google Slides format.
This printable key helps you identify common benthic macroinvertebrates in stream/river ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest. It also comes in an interactive virtual version!
Nature provides us with many unforgettable sounds. Breezes whistling through the leaves, birds singing early in the morning, and streams gurgling over rocks are just some of the sounds children recognize. In this activity, students use their sense of sound to created a sound map.
Become an expert explorer! Follow this step-by-step BirdSleuth Explorer’s Guidebook and use your senses to discover the birds in this park.
Climate change and increasing water temperatures, along with added nutrients from human activities, impact both aquatic ecosystems and the people who depend on them. In this experiment-based lesson, students examine one outcome — algae blooms.
This colorful, 4 page Salmon Guide gives you information about the various species of salmon in the Nisqually, including life history and population trends.
This activity allows students to compare the biodiversity of two separate areas: natural vs cultivated, burned vs unburned, the possibilities are endless!
This activity, especially when repeated many times over the course of a month or year, helps students connect with the ecosystem around them and observe changes to the natural world. Many different versions of this activity exist, but we love this one from Pacific Education Institute! https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1Tc8KSJR-jmdfZFVaG_A06YXiqSI21Eoo2rqK4dKSRXo/edit?usp=sharing
This curriculum, created by The Tribal Communities of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, and the Seattle Aquarium, helps students learn about salmon through story, experience and information. https://www.k12.wa.us/sites/default/files/public/indianed/curriculum/onewiththewatershed.pdf
This map shows the protected lands and habitat restoration initiatives throughout the Nisqually in more detail. There’s a lot going on here!
This Story Map highlights 3 of the major salmon habitat restoration efforts in the Nisqually – the Nisqually estuary, Ohop Creek (one of our field visit sites) and the Nisqually Community Forest.
This interactive map allows you to view detailed stream survey and water type data.
Made by the Washington Stormwater Center, this is a great introduction to the watershed and water quality issues in Nisqually.
Check out all of our participating schools (yellow) and the water quality sites they monitor (blue) here! Click on the water quality site to see up to 25 years worth of historical data. Here’s a User’s Guide with a lot of neat tips on how to make the most of the map!
Project WET has provided four different lessons related to water than can be done at home. Seeing Watersheds A Drop in the Bucket H2Olympics A Plume Problem
“This Toolkit is an educational resource featuring important native foods in Salish Country and the rich cultural traditions that surround them. The foods were selected because of their high nutritional value, cultural significance, and reasonable availability. The toolkit includes: • A cedar bentwood box, cooking tongs, cooking rocks, display containers, […]
Watch Dr.Virginia Beavert (Yakama) talk about the importance of thanking and talking to plants and medicines. Virginia Beavert: You Talk to the Plant, You Thank It
Teachings of the Tree People is a tribute to the life and work of Skokomish elder Gerald Bruce Miller (subiyay), a nationally prominent cultural leader and teacher who brought his talents home to lead a cultural renaissance in the Pacific Northwest. His story offers a powerful model of cultural and […]
What is it like to do Water Quality Monitoring? Check out these WQ Instructional Videos, one for each test! Thanks to our project partner, South Sound GREEN, for making them! Turbidity Dissolved Oxygen pH Nitrates
The purpose of the Engineering Solutions stormwater curriculum is to develop a deeper understanding of the serious issues facing our community with stormwater runoff and specific actions we can take to improve the quality of our water. State and federal governments have established strict regulations regarding stormwater management, including funding […]
Polluted stormwater runoff is the number one threat to the water quality of Puget Sound. Our salmon and other aquatic life depend on clean water for their survival. The purpose of the Elementary Stormwater Curriculum is to develop an understanding of the serious issues facing our community from stormwater runoff […]
How’s My Waterway was designed to provide the general public with information about the condition of their local waters based on data that states, federal, tribal, local agencies and others have provided to EPA. Water quality information is displayed on 3 scales in How’s My Waterway; community, state and national. More recent or more detailed water information may exist […]
Island Wood Homewaters Program created this Island Wood Sakai Stream Curriculum that can be adapted for use at your own monitoring sites! This five week, 15 lesson unit culminates in an engineering project.
From the USGS, this graphic details the proportions of water on Earth. “This image shows blue spheres representing relative amounts of Earth’s water in comparison to the size of the Earth. Are you surprised that these water spheres look so small? They are only small in relation to the size […]
Discover Water and The Role of Water in Our Lives on Project WET’s new web portal here.