By Education Specialist Tonya Anderson

“I’m officially a bird now!” a 6th grader said, pointing to the new “bird band” made of pipe cleaner and numbered beads on her ankle.
Another middle schooler laughed, “I’m trying to measure him, but he won’t stop dabbing!”
They and around 60 of their classmates were visiting SFBBO’s Coyote Creek Field Station in May. They’d arrived in a yellow bus at 8:00 a.m., early enough to see bird species they had learned about in class. The kids were separated into three groups. I led the station where …
students, including the girl who dubbed herself “Official Bird,” collected data on each other as if their partners were banded birds.
Later, my first group of newly “banded” students watched Landbird Biologist Dan Wenny extract passerines from mist nets, and observed Landbird Program Director Josh Scullen band and collect data on the birds.
Sixty students can be rambunctious, but handling birds is quiet work and the kids became hushed as they got to see 13 tiny birds face-to-face. As each bird emerged from a net or a bird bag, the students jostled to take pictures with their smartphones—capturing the rarity of seeing such delicate wildlife up close.
The unique experience was possible thanks to a Measure Q Urban Open Space Grant SFBBO received from the Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority, which aims to advance environmental literacy for children through science-based programs.
Later, my first group of newly “banded” students watched Landbird Biologist Dan Wenny extract passerines from mist nets, and observed Landbird Program Director Josh Scullen band and collect data on the birds.
Sixty students can be rambunctious, but handling birds is quiet work and the kids became hushed as they got to see 13 tiny birds face-to-face. As each bird emerged from a net or a bird bag, the students jostled to take pictures with their smartphones—capturing the rarity of seeing such delicate wildlife up close.
The unique experience was possible thanks to a Measure Q Urban Open Space Grant SFBBO received from the Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority, which aims to advance environmental literacy for children through science-based programs.


Around 500 6th and 7th grade students from two Santa Clara County schools, Windmill Springs Elementary School and Sheppard Middle School, involved in the project visited CCFS in May. The fieldtrips were the final component of a two-part education curriculum module developed by SFBBO with the grant funding.
In the first module, students learned about migratory bird patterns in class. I think what was most special about this module was that youth got access to real, meaningful bird data lovingly collected by CCFS volunteers and staff over more than 35 years. What was most meaningful to me about the second module was getting to see the data I helped collect as a volunteer bird bander come alive in the eyes of young scientists.
May’s activities were a pilot, and feedback indicates that the kids enjoyed their morning immersed in nature, got to apply scientific ideas where real-world science happens, and successfully recalled the IDs of several bird species in the field. SFBBO is making updates to the curriculum and it will soon be available online for free.
You can reach Tonya at landbird_intern_1@sfbbo.org. You can learn more about our outreach program on our website.
In the first module, students learned about migratory bird patterns in class. I think what was most special about this module was that youth got access to real, meaningful bird data lovingly collected by CCFS volunteers and staff over more than 35 years. What was most meaningful to me about the second module was getting to see the data I helped collect as a volunteer bird bander come alive in the eyes of young scientists.
May’s activities were a pilot, and feedback indicates that the kids enjoyed their morning immersed in nature, got to apply scientific ideas where real-world science happens, and successfully recalled the IDs of several bird species in the field. SFBBO is making updates to the curriculum and it will soon be available online for free.
You can reach Tonya at landbird_intern_1@sfbbo.org. You can learn more about our outreach program on our website.
