Waters Elementary
4540 N. Campbell Ave. Chicago, IL 60625  (773)534-5090 
School Hours 8:15 - 3:15
​Office Hours- 8:00am to 3:45pm
​
  • About Waters
    • News >
      • This Week at Waters - Principal's Newsletter
      • Calendar
      • Cafeteria Menus
    • Admission / Enrollment
    • Medical & Dental Requirements
    • Policies and Procedures
    • Contact
  • Student Learning
    • Before & After School
    • Social-Emotional
    • Core Subjects
    • Fine & Performing Arts
    • Gardening & Environmental Science
    • Extracurriculars >
      • Academic Teams & Clubs
      • Sports
    • Additional Resources
  • Waters Community
    • Local School Council
    • WatersToday
    • Get Involved
  • COVID Guidance

Pandemic Gallery and Staying Warm

2/18/2021

 
​Dear Friends,
Here's a link to the newest watersecology post: a gallery of beautiful photos sent to me during the Pandemic, a silver lining in our isolation.
https://www.watersecology.org/ecology-news/


Next week I will be teaching "Staying Warm": Survival Skills for when the temperature drops and the Power goes out.
It will be a science class on the way heat is transferred in our homes and bodies :insulation, convection, conduction, radiation, evaporation, oxidation.  Considering the Polar vortex, Texas, and the string of challenges we have been facing, never hurts to know something about keeping warm.

Be well, stay well,
Mr. Leki

Valentines to Mother EarthInbox

2/14/2021

 
Dear Friends, 
Please visit the website to see the new posting
Mr. Leki

https://www.watersecology.org/ecology-news/
​

Ecology Education / Volunteer Opportunities

2/13/2021

 
​Dear Ecology Volunteers!
Below I have re-printed 3 volunteer ecology offerings. The first is from Jeff Skrentney co-steward at Sauganash / LaBagh inviting you to participate in a series of workdays!

2nd is an offering from the Forest Preserve District to learn about the problem of poaching in the Preserves.

Finally, an invitation to attend training workshops to gain certification to be on a prescription burn crew.

Pandemic lemons to lemonade!
Mr. Leki

1st
GREAT NEWS!  The FPCC has opened up restrictions, and we can get back to holding public restoration events with volunteers outside our core team of volunteers, including NEW volunteers.

As with most of our workdays in 2020, these events are INVITATION ONLY.  You must express interest in attending, and then RSVP to the email invitation you will receive the week before the workday you are invited to join. 

We had hoped to have workdays this coming Sunday, February 7th, but it looks like it will be too cold even for our hearty group of core volunteers.  The following Saturday, February 13th, we also have a workday planned, but again, the cold weather forecast makes that workday look tenuous.  


Here are the upcoming LaBagh Workdays:
February 21st & 27th
March 7th & 13th
March 21st & 27th
April 4th, 17th & 25th (possible planting day)
May 2nd, 22nd & 30th (all possible planting days)

If you are interested and available, please express your interest to me with an email or a text message to me at 773.677.8852.  Right now, I am looking for volunteers for our February and March dates.  I will not be keeping lists of volunteers for workdays beyond that.  

We have missed you all, have you missed us?  Send me an email, shoot me a text message, and share with me when you would like to volunteer.  I will get you on our invitation lists so you can attend our upcoming February and March workdays.  

Really looking forward to getting back to a regular schedule of workdays, and we hope to see you all over the next few weeks.  We can’t accomplish the LaBagh restoration without our volunteers!  

THANK YOU!

-jrrs
Jeff Skrentny
Chicago Ornithological Society (COS) Board of Directors
lead LaBagh Woods restoration volunteer



AND, 2nd
The Phantom Menace:

Poaching in the Preserves
February 17, 2021 • Noon–1pm
 
John McCabe Director of Resource Management
presents with Mike Parzygnat from Law Enforcement
 
Join us to learn why poaching is a threat to our natural areas and how
you can help us protect the natural resources in the Preserves. During
this presentation, you will hear information on vulnerable plant and
animal populations and archaeological sites, as well as learn why
protecting these resources is critical. You will also learn how to identify
the tools and techniques used by poachers so you too can help stop
this destructive behavior.
 
Register on the training page of our volunteer website. Don’t have an account? RSVP to Alex.Horvath@cookcountyil.gov by next Tuesday, February 16. 
 


Finally 3rd, 
From: Brooke Thurau <brooke.thurau@TNC.ORG>
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2021 4:48 PM
Subject: VSN Scholarships Available for CW Prescription Burn Crew Training

 
Good afternoon!
I wanted to let you know that there are still plenty of spaces in The Morton Arboretum’s online Prescription Burn Crew Training and the VSN has scholarship funds to pay for the course. If you know of any volunteers that could benefit from the course, please have them register here.
 
Please don’t hesitate to reach out if you have any questions.
My best,
Brooke
 

Chicago Wilderness Prescription Burn Crew Training (Online)

Chicago Wilderness offers the Midwest Ecological Prescription Burn Crew Member Training class online through The Morton Arboretum. Based on the National Wildfire Coordinating Group’s (NWCG) S-130 and S-190 courses, this two-day training covers the basics of such topics as fire behavior, controlled burn techniques, and smoke management. Registration closes at 8 a.m. on Thursday, Feb 25. 

 

Thursday, February 25, 2021, noon (Central time): Access self-paced materials online

Thursday and Friday, March 4 and 5, 2021, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (Central time): Attend live sessions online.

Spider Plants

2/7/2021

 
Picture
Hello Ecofriends,
At this time of year we traditionally, with the Kindergardeners, begin a little project on growing spider plants, Chlorophytum comosum. These tropical plants have long, narrow,  arching leaves. When they are ready,they develop long arching stems dotted with delicate white flowers. When the flowers are finished,  they leave behind the primordial beginnings of a new plants, clinging to the stem,  miniatures of their mother, complete with leaves and a straggle of roots hanging down. The leaves and the roots vaguely resemble spiders. The babies can be clipped from this umbillicus, and set in a jar of water where they will steadily increase in size, both leaves and roots. After a few months they are ready for planting in soil, and beginning the cycle again.


That is what we normally do with the kinder kids, and if you have a spider plant, and a kindergartener, you might try it at home. A very low risk experiment.  When I showed the kinder-kids a spiderplant this week, one child burst out: "We have that! You gave one to my sister and now it is HUGE!"

The project comes with a slightly absurd and a-scientific song and story about a spider that falls in love with a palm tree, gets married and has kids. It is on the watersecology.org website under Kindergarden, and is linked here. The song, I wrote, and the recording is of my grandaughter Nicole and I. The artwork was done by my grandson Salim.
https://vimeo.com/507811909

(BTW, the weird crusty, crackling part in the middle is when I ask the kids to make the sound of a spider walking up a palm tree)
Some years ago I asked my son Jamal to translate the song into Spanish, and what he produced far exceeded the original. Apparently, in Latin America, the name for Chlorophytum comosum is Lazo de amor, a ribbon of love. In Jamal's version,  a ribbon is vaulted aloft in the air by a wind, and is tangled in the leaves of a palm tree. So wonderful was this experience that the ribbon and palm married, and the children that resulted were "lazo de amor", spider plants. This wonderful song ends with a chorus that says: 
Between the ribbon and palm tree
There is a lazo de amor
Between a tree and the earth,
There is a lazo de amor
Between the clouds and the trees
There is a lazo de amor
Between you and your mother
There is a lazo de amor.....

It is a wonderful thing to think about how many things can be paired in this way,
things held together by un lazo de amor, extending the song to infinity.
I stopped singing this song several years back because the fast clip of the spanish verse is daunting for kindergarten kids. But the choro  (the response) at the end is easy:  "Hay un lazo de amor". I hope they, and you, will try it, and that you will invent new pairings, things held together by "un lazo de amor".

Be well, stay well,
Mr. Leki

Snake and Turtle

2/3/2021

 
Dear Friends, 
Normally at this time of year we would be rehearsing with our 1st grade actors to put on the play: 
The Legend of Snake and Turtle.
We found a version of the play performed and filmed and edited by Waters Media Lab students supervised by Julie Peterson and Vicky Mendoza from more than ten years ago.  It was their first time using the technique of "green screen". These students have now graduated high school! The second clip is the accompanying song with some great stills showing Waters School history. I have been sharing these with the primary grades classes and they are all linked at 
watersecology.org
Old Waters Media Lab-Two Friends and the Legend of Snake and Turtle
Old Waters Media Lab- Two Friends Song


Enjoy
Mr. Leki

That snow....

2/2/2021

 
​...showed the tracks of the tiniest bird, 
the  most light footed mouse, 
the clomp of rabbit,
squirrel, 
possum,
and booted humans...
all in our garden. 
Go and see. 
Track them, 
and imagine their story. 
Picture
    Ecology Program & Calendar
    PictureMr. Pete Leki, Waters Ecology Program Founder and Director
    Visit the Waters Ecology Program Website for current/historical writings, films, photos, and interviews.

     Email: 
    petelekisan@gmail.com

    Links
    Water Ecology Program Website
    Riverbank Neighbors
    Friends of the Chicago River
    Forest Preserves of Cook County
    Openlands
    North Park Village Nature Center

    Archives

    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    October 2020
    August 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Picture

CPS’ Non-Discrimination Statement: cps.edu/nondiscrimination

Copyright © 2020