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A Fisheye's View: Hatching Your Students Into Trout Caretakers

by Ethan Rotman

Pages 2 and 3 of 14

Classroom Aquarium Education Program
Teacher's Guide
A Fisheye's View:
Hatching
Trout
Your Students
Into Caretakers
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Table of Contents
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Introduction page

Table of contents

Program overview: sparking wonder in your classroom

Hatching the benefits of Classroom Aquatic Education Program

Trout and teachers swim upstream: challenging aspects of the program

What was your experience with Classroom Aquarium Education Program?

Credits 
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A Fisheye’s View: Hatching Your Students Into Trout Caretakers
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Have you ever wondered how to bring nature and science into your K-12 classroom? Now is your chance! This guide will give you a fisheye’s view of what it takes to hatch trout eggs with your students, right in your own classroom!

This book will explore the following aspects of the Trout in the Classroom program:
● Positive impacts
● Potential challenges
● Your role in guiding students
● Experiences from students and teachers
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Program Overview
Sparking Wonder in Your Classroom
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The California Fish and Wildlife’s Classroom Aquarium Education Program (CAEP) is a community-based initiative that provides students with an engaging opportunity to learn about fish species and their habitats. This program is equally beneficial to both students and teachers! CAEP lets you introduce science to your classroom through a hands-on, real-life experiment.
You’ll guide your students as they observe trout growing from egg to fry, giving you a unique chance to instill and nurture caring attitudes towards aquatic life. Throughout this one-of-a-kind experience, you and your students can foster a deeper understanding of the value in our shared water resources.
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Hatching the Benefits of CAEP
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When students raise and release trout they learn more than biology and environmental stewardship. A classroom egg-to-fish incubation project has many benefits extending beyond the classroom. Hatching trout with your students may lead to a newfound interest in outdoor activities, inspiring a long-lasting love of nature.

Let’s uncover some of the many benefits of this program.
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Benefits to your students include:
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● Creates a connection between students and
their local fish and waterways
● Provides an engaging, hands-on learning
experience for all grade levels 
● Includes science, language arts, and math
● Sparks curiosity and wonder about
the natural world
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● Alignment with NGSS standards
● Easy integration across all disciplines and grade levels
● Support system from sponsors and fellow teachers
● Endorses an environmentally-friendly attitude in the classroom

Next, we will explore some of the challenges you might face during
this experience.
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Benefits to you, the instructor, include:
Challenging Aspects
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Trout and Teachers Swim Upstream!
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As you can see, raising trout with your students is a rewarding experience but it does pose some challenges in your role as a teacher, including:

● Tank set-up and maintenance
● Time commitment during standardized testing times
● The pressure of keeping fish alive—sometimes, nature takes charge and
some fish don’t survive


All of your hard work pays off when your students release the trout at the end of the 6–8 week program. Everything you need to succeed will be covered in your training, and you’ll have plenty of support from fellow teachers, sponsors, and volunteers throughout the course of the program.
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