Classroom Archives • Arkansas Game & Fish Commission https://www.agfc.com/category/classroom/ Wed, 25 Jun 2025 18:33:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 Entergy shines light on conservation education with grant to AGFC School of Conservation Leadership  https://www.agfc.com/news/entergy-shines-light-on-conservation-education-with-grant-to-agfc-school-of-conservation-leadership/ Thu, 19 Dec 2024 17:19:15 +0000 https://www.agfc.com/?p=16806 The post Entergy shines light on conservation education with grant to AGFC School of Conservation Leadership  appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>

LITTLE ROCK — Thanks to a $25,000 grant from the Entergy Charitable Foundation, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s School of Conservation Leadership program is positioned to bring free outdoor education to Arkansas classrooms that’s both entertaining and in compliance with state teaching standards.

“We are honored to receive this grant in partnership with Entergy and the Arkansas Game and Fish Foundation to create a foundation for success through conservation education in Arkansas,” Mary Beth Hatch, AGFC Chief of Education, said. “This grant will allow the AGFC Education Division to provide resources, equipment and funding to schools that earn the AGFC School of Conservation Leadership Designation,”

The School of Conservation Leadership designation is reserved for those schools that participate in the many outdoor education programs offered through the AGFC. Teachers and students can visit hatcheries or nature centers, become members of the Arkansas Stream Team Program, develop an Archery in the Schools program or choose a variety of other outdoor education offerings from the AGFC.

“For more than a century, Entergy Arkansas has been committed to delivering safe, reliable, affordable and sustainable electric utility service to what now encompasses more than 730,000 residential, commercial, and industrial customers across our 63-county service territory,” said Brand Hinkle, senior public affairs representative. “However, we see value extending beyond just powering homes and businesses – it extends to strengthening the communities we serve. One of our key priorities is investing in local solutions that attack the root causes of poverty, support education and workforce development, and protect and preserve the environment.”

According to Hinkle,  the grant award to AGFF is based on the organization’s alignment with the Entergy Charitable Foundation’s philanthropic focus on sustaining families with poverty solutions, education and workforce opportunities and environmental stewardship.

According to Hatch, the money will be used to help provide resources and materials to classrooms to complete educational programs such as field experiences and in-classroom exposure to outdoor skills and nature-based learning.

“This will ensure that these honored schools can carry out the mission of conservation education as an integrated part of their daily commitment to educating students in Arkansas,” Hatch said.

Entergy Charitable Foundation grants are provided solely from shareholder profit and not Entergy Arkansas customer dollars. For more information, visit www.entergy.com/csr/giving.

Visit www.agfc.com/education/school-of-conservation-leadership to learn more about earning the School of Conservation Leadership designation from the AGFC.

 

####

CUTLINE:
Fishing derbies are one of many class experiences available for Arkansas schools that build support for a School of Conservation Leadership designation. AGFC photo by Mike Wintroath. 

The post Entergy shines light on conservation education with grant to AGFC School of Conservation Leadership  appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>
Education Outreach https://www.agfc.com/education/education-outreach/ Tue, 07 May 2024 20:32:07 +0000 https://www.agfc.com/?page_id=14757 The post Education Outreach appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>

Education Outreach

Arkansas Game and Fish Commission educators are available to come to your location to teach about wildlife and the outdoors at your school, civic group, library, church, home-school group or other organized group.

Topics we cover include:

  • Conservation education and wildlife biology
  • Setting up and teaching basic archery or bowhunting
  • Hunting skills, including working with you to teach hunting
  • Fishing clinics, classes and skill building at any level or fishing type
  • Arkansas wildlife biology, identification and viewing
  • Birding skills and taking groups to view birds
  • Hunter Education
  • Boater Education
  • ATV Safety
  • Outdoor and/or wild game cooking techniques and recipes
  • Orienteering
  • Rifle, pistol and shotgun firearms safety and instruction
  • Helping teachers meet academic standards and requirements through customized activities in your classroom
  • And anything else outdoors or wildlife related you can think of!

Bring The Outdoors Into Your Community

Complete the form below to bring the AGFC to you! Outreach staff will follow up to coordinate a visit. Due to a high level of statewide interest, please allow AGFC as much advanced notice as possible to ensure we can accommodate one of your preferred dates.

Certain popular items like the mobile aquarium have protocols and guidelines. Please review these guidelines before filling out the form below.

Plan a visit or participate in a class at one of our nature centers today!


Search Education

More on Classroom, Nature Center, Programs

The post Education Outreach appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>
Outdoor Adventures program sparks enthusiasm at Pinkston Middle School https://www.agfc.com/news/outdoor-adventures-program-sparks-enthusiasm-at-pinkston-middle-school/ Wed, 19 Apr 2023 00:00:00 +0000 https://agfc.wpengine.com/outdoor-adventures-program-sparks-enthusiasm-at-pinkston-middle-school/ April 19, 2023 Randy Zellers Assistant Chief of Communications MOUNTAIN HOME — Freddy Penka has the key to capturing students’ imagination and attention, and it’s something he’s willing to share with any teacher wanting to deliver an elective to students they’ll be excited to attend. Penka’s Outdoor Adventures Class at Pinkston Middle School in Baxter […]

The post Outdoor Adventures program sparks enthusiasm at Pinkston Middle School appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>
April 19, 2023

Randy Zellers

Assistant Chief of Communications

MOUNTAIN HOME — Freddy Penka has the key to capturing students’ imagination and attention, and it’s something he’s willing to share with any teacher wanting to deliver an elective to students they’ll be excited to attend. Penka’s Outdoor Adventures Class at Pinkston Middle School in Baxter County combines real-world outdoor knowledge with state-approved curriculums to teach students skills they rarely experience in a school setting.

Outdoor Adventures is a partnership between the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and the Outdoors Tomorrow Foundation to deliver a semester-long course of curriculum that satisfies all state requirements for a co-ed physical education course, a local elective or an agricultural science course.

“We’ve taught Hunter Education at our school for 15 years, but it’s only a seven-week class,” Penka said. “The addition of the lessons in the curriculum we received from the AGFC allowed us to turn the course into a full-fledged elective for our students.”

Paddling at a local park pond was a highlight of the program. Photo courtesy Freddy Penka.
Penka still teaches two hours of World Geography to sixth- and seventh-graders, but the other four classes in his teaching day are focused on the outdoors.

“I have two classes with sixth-graders and two with seventh-graders,” Penka said. “We’ve covered archery, paddling canoes, fishing and survival skills like building a campfire and using a compass. The students have really enjoyed all the different things we cover through the semester.”

According to Sheila Lovelady-Connerly, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s school connections coordinator, Pinkston Middle School is one of 18 campuses enrolled in the program.

“We still have Project WILD and other programs that have been around for decades, but the Outdoor Adventures program has only been around for three years,” Lovelady-Connerly said. “It differs from our previous programs because it includes much more outdoor recreation in the lessons, not just wildlife management and biology. And it’s growing very fast.”

Freddy Penka oversees students during a campfire-building program. AGFC photo.
Perhaps incredible field experiences like some that Penka’s class has enjoyed have fueled the spread of the program. In the last two years, he has taken his students on trips many adults would envy, including a fishing visit to Dry Run Creek, a catch-and-release area on the Norfork Tailwater famous for its trophy trout fishing. Another trip involved a day of paddling at a local park pond using canoes provided by the AGFC’s Fred Berry Crooked Creek Nature Center in Yellville.

“I set up a large tractor tire’s inner tube and put a canoe on it right here at the school to teach the students how to get in and out and keep their balance before we had that trip,” Penka said. “They enjoyed it so much I could hear them talking in the hallway about looking forward to that trip for days before we went.”

But the class isn’t only field trips. Indoor instruction is a critical component of every lesson plan.

“We try to schedule a lot of the indoor instruction during times when the weather isn’t good,” Penka said. “That way the kids can really enjoy their outdoor lesson instead of worrying about cold or rain.”

Thanks to local agencies and organizations pitching in, even some of Penka’s in-class instruction is pretty memorable.

“We receive trout eggs from the (Norfork National) Fish Hatchery and hatch the trout in an aquarium we received from the AGFC,” Penka said. “It’s a lot of work, but the students get to see the fish hatch and grow, and we get to take them to the river to release them as part of the project.”

Lovelady-Connerly said there are more than 34 units of teaching materials available for teachers to choose, so they can mold the experience to fit their local resources and maturity level of their students.

A trout-fishing trip to Dry Run Creek gave students a huge payoff for their lessons. Photo courtesy Freddy Penka.
“That’s key,” Penka said. “You have to keep the class sizes small enough to supervise the students and you have to be aware of maturity issues of students who want to participate. If you have a student who is not able to control themselves well, then you don’t want to hand them a bow and arrow or fishing rod with a hook and just let them go.”

The program requires a small commitment from the school at startup, with the curriculum costing $1,000, but the school then receives a matching grant from OTF in that same amount to cover supplies needed for classes. The AGFC can even help offset that initial startup expense through one of its conservation education grants, funded by fine money accrued from wildlife citations in every county.

“I can’t think of any school administration in Arkansas that could see this program as anything but good,” Penka said. “We’re giving our students something that they can use in the real world and they’re excited just about every time they walk through the door.”

Visit https://www.agfc.com/en/education/classroom/outdoor-adventures/ to learn more about Outdoor Adventures and how to introduce it to your school.

 

CUTLINES:

Girls with spark
Pinkston sixth graders learned to build a campfire using a ferro rod in a portion of the class. AGFC photo.

Kids with canoes
Paddling at a local park pond was a highlight of the program. Photo courtesy Freddy Penka.

Penka with students
Freddy Penka oversees students during a campfire-building program. AGFC photo.

Girl with trout
A trout-fishing trip to Dry Run Creek gave students a huge payoff for their lessons. Photo courtesy Freddy Penka.

The post Outdoor Adventures program sparks enthusiasm at Pinkston Middle School appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

]]>