The following are only a few sample programs that can be given to students of all
ages and types. These will work in various formats, including slide presentations,
group discussion, interactive displays and activities, field trips or any
combination thereof, depending on the group size and the time available, as well
as the subject matter and age of the students involved.
Please note that This Earth can provide programs on any geological or paleontological topic (we've done glaciers and groundwater, caves and volcanoes, plate tectonics and geologic time, rocks, minerals and maps, to name a few). This Earth can design short courses and field trips to a school's or an organization's specifications, and for K-12 teachers. This Earth programs can be designed to fit state educational standards. Please contact me for details.
GROUP SIZE
The optimal group size for any hands-on and interactive program is around 20 students, although arrangements can be made for larger groups. Slide presentations can be made to groups of any size, from five to 500, and more.
TIME REQUIREMENTS
The minimum amount of time required for each program is listed following the name of the program.
In all cases, This Earth programs are related as much as possible to the geology of the local area, so that students begin to understand their own region's history and stories as well as the larger story of the Earth.
- Time Machine to the Past
- How to Dig Up a Dinosaur
- Jurassic Park
- Gobi Dinosaurs
- Grand Canyon Journey
- The Geology of Everyday Life
- Geology of Your Region
- How to Use Earth Sciences in Your Classroom
- How to Speak Earth
Time Machine to the Past: Fossils and Ancient Environments
- Slides, interactive fossil exercise, discussion, field trip, grades K and up
- 30 minutes to two hours for classroom activity, half day for field trip (not including travel time). For kindergarten and first grade, this program is modified into about a half-hour time slot where most of the time is spent looking at and touching the fossils.

The last part of the program will involve a discussion about how to use fossils to create a reconstruction of that ancient environment in which that rock layer formed. This is a hands on and interactive program with the students. The fossils will be set up and the students can touch and look at them, pass them around and discuss the questions.
A shorter program follows the same principles, but simplifies the discussion process for the time constraints. If the students have the ability to do a field trip and there are fossils nearby, we will use fossils in place in the rock to do this exercise.
How to Dig up a Dinosaur
- Slides presentation, hands-on interactive exercises, grades three and up
- 30 minutes minimum, one hour with hands-on lab classroom activity, longer if working outdoors
Jurassic Park: In the Footsteps of Dinosaurs
- Slides, interactive exercise, fossils, discussion grades two and up
- 1.5 hours minimum for classroom activity, Two hours for northern Arizona (or other local) field trip (not including travel time)
Gobi Dinosaurs: New Finds, New Ideas From Mongolia
- Slide presentation and hands-on fossils, discussion, grades four and up
- One-hour minimum classroom presentation.
Students see a paleontological expedition from beginning to end as it travels
through the Gobi Desert in Mongolia. We discuss preparations for such field work,
equipment and supplies, and meet the team. The trip
takes us across one of the remotest regions on Earth, to find some of the more
spectacular fossils known. The dinosaur and mammal fossils collected from
one special location in the Gobi are changing the way paleontologists think about
dinosaurs, their social behavior and relationships with other animals.
River of Time: Grand Canyon River Trip
- Slide and video presentation, grades four and up
- One-hour minimum classroom presentation.
The Geology of Everyday Life
- Slides and discussion, grades six and up
- One-hour minimum classroom presentation, full day with field trip.
Geology of Your Region
- Slide and map presentation and field trips, grades four and up
- One-hour minimum classroom presentation
How to Use Earth Sciences in Your Classroom
- Slide presentation, discussion and hand-on activities for teachers
- Two-hour minimum presentation (preferably longer)
How to Speak Earth
- Discussion and practice sessions for outdoor professionals who lead the public into wilderness settings
- Two-hour minimum discussion (preferably longer); can be offered as several day workshop for an organization or in conjunction with a college course.
This workshop focuses on how to interpret the earth sciences to wilderness
travelers in a professional guiding situation. An important portion of any
wilderness expedition is interpreting the landscape for your travelers. It can be
intimidating to try and interpret earth science concepts to travelers in a way
that is interesting and applicable. In this workshop we discuss problems and
techniques. In longer workshops, participants will give practice talks and
critique style and technique. If possible, we'll get outdoors and use the
landscape around us for practice.
