Teaching Children About Water

Children are naturally curious and eager to know how things work. They like stories, rhythm, rhyme, and bright colors. They love information, particularly if it’s interesting, strange, or silly. Today there are dozens of wonderful, colorful books about water. (Photo by Mark Kemp-Rye.)

Interested in children's water books? Click Here!

What’s on the Web?
The Internet offers some great water Web sites for kids—with animated hydrologic cycles and happy little guides, such as Lehigh Valley Water Suppliers’ three-dimensional Dewey at www.lvwater.org and The Groundwater Foundation’s G.W. Gecko, official mascot of the Awesome Aquifer Club, www.groundwater.org/KidsCorner/kidscorner.htm.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has a very cool kids site at www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/. All three sites provide animated hydrologic cycles.

Intrigued? Here are more:
• Des Moines Water Works—
www.dmww.com/edu_water_facts.asp

Educating Young People About Water offers 143 drinking water curriculums for children—www.uwex.edu/erc/eypaw/

EEK! Environmental Education for Kidswww.dnr.state.wi.us/org/caer/ce/eek/

Enchanted Learningwww.enchantedlearning.com

Drinking Water in Schoolswww.epa.gov/OGWDW/schools/index.html
Across the country, millions of children spend their days in schools and childcare centers. Therefore, assuring good, safe drinking water in these facilities is extremely important. To aid in this effort, the U.S. EPA has created a “Drinking Water in Schools and Child Care Facilities” Web page.
Lead in school drinking water is the current focus of this site. It features information about the sources of lead in drinking water, guidance materials to assist with testing for lead in drinking water, and information on the laws and regulations concerning lead in drinking water.

EnviroScape¨www.enviroscapes.com
Interactive, hands-on environmental tools that make learning about the environment fun, effective, and interactive: EnviroScape® offers a series of watershed models, puzzles, kits, posters, and more that tackle language and learning style barriers while engaging children and meeting state science standards.
E-mail info@enviroscapes.com or call (703) 631-8810 x12.

Envision Environmental Education—groundwater models at www.gwmodel.com.

Franklin Institute Onlinewww.fi.edu/city/water/science.html

Geography for Kidswww.geography4kids.com/index.html

Give Water A Hand is a program of the University of Wisconsin - Environmental Resources Center. Support for Give Water a Hand is provided by National Fish and Wildlife Foundation; the U.S. Department of Agriculture, CSREES and NRCS; Church & Dwight, Co., Inc., and the University of Wisconsin—
www.uwex.edu/erc/gwah

Groundwater Adventurerswww.groundwateradventurers.org
This site from the national Ground Water Association explores the world of groundwater with brain ticklers, puzzles, fun experiments, and more.

Groundwater Foundation's Kids Corner—This organization has fun, colorful pages of activities, games, puzzles, and information to teach children groundwater basics. Visit their site at www.groundwater.org/kc/kc.html.

Learning to Be Waterwisewww.getwise.org/wwise

Mojave Water
www.mojavewater.org/Mwa800.htm#Hydrologic

New Jersey American Water Works Association (NJAWWA) Kid's Water Zone
www.njawwa.org/kidsweb/Default.htm

Project WET
An interdisciplinary water education program for educators of students age five to 18, Project WET's centerpiece is a collection of more than 90 broad-based water resource activities in their Curriculum and Activity Guide.
Project WET also has lots of fun, interactive games and information galore for young and old alike.

Sacramento Area Water Works Association's Kid's Spotwww.sawwa.org/KidsSpot.htm

Sacramento Stormwater Management Programwww.sacstormwater.org/fun/kids.htm

Teach the Children Well is a collection of links on more than 50 topics for use by students in grades K-4 as well as their parents and teachers—www.teachthechildrenwell.com

Tucson Water Outreach Education Programs offer three curriculums for elementary and middle school children: "Da Drops," a three-part water education program for first through third graders that focuses on the water cycle, water supply, and water conservation; "Our Water, Our Future" is a two-part interdisciplinary program for fourth and fifth grade students that addresses the water cycle, water supply and quality, water use, and conservation; and "The Tucson Toolkit" is a five-lesson curriculum designed for middle school students focusing on the water cycle, water supply, and usage, environmental concerns, and conservation. Learn more at www.eeexchange.org/tucsonwater

US Geological Survey's (USGS) Water Resources Outreach Program offers water education posters at water.usgs.gov/outreach/OutReach.html.
Their Water Science for Schools Web site offers information on many aspects of water, along with pictures, data, maps, and an interactive center where you can give opinions and test your water knowledge. Visit ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/ to learn more!

Water Education for Teacherswww.montana.edu/wwwwet/


"The Water Wizard"www.nwwater.com/kidzone/index.html


USGS Water Science for Schoolswwwga.water.usgs.gov/edu/

What's a Watershed?www.ctic.purdue.edu/KYW/glossary/whatisaws.html

For more information see "Teaching Children about the Hydrologic Cycle."


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