By C.J. Hirschfield
You know what they say about
business success: “Always listen to your customers.”
At Children’s Fairyland, we’re
always listening. And what do we hear our customers talking about? Poop.
"Everyone Poops," a favorite in Fairyland's Reading Room. |
Feces is fascinating when you’re
2, 3, 4, or 5. And let’s face it, it’s pretty fascinating to parents, too.
Which is why we’re designing two
new science programs featuring animal defecation.
We’re taking it slowly, because
we don’t want to get it wrong.
At our staff meeting last week, our
education director, Teresa DeBerry, reported that our team’s first effort to
gather and cast in resin our many animals’ poop was unsuccessful, because
unanticipated rain disrupted the hardening process. (Don’t hate me because my
staff meetings are so much more interesting than yours…)
But we’ll be trying again,
storing the poop in the freezer (which allows to it retain its original color)
and buying more resin at Michael’s Art Supply. A “poop cart” to transport the results
will makes its debut next month.
Fairyland's animal-poop display, a work-in-progress. |
Teresa predicts that the exhibit will be a big
hit. “The horse poop was just beautiful,” she says, smiling at the memory. “So
full of hay…”
Our Science Alive! animal program
includes a visit to an underserved school to interact with and learn about one
of our small animals, a trip later that same week to meet our larger animals,
and then tickets for the family to return at a later date. For many of our
younger city kids, walking into an animal enclosure is a scary experience. Teresa
knows it’s important early on to acknowledge the sight and smell of animal
poop. “What’s that smell?” she asks the class. Apparently there’s always one
kid who yells out “poop!” to the delight of all. It then becomes okay to talk
about it, and to learn that: animals poop a lot, they poop everywhere, and
their poop is different than ours. An explanation of the digestive process
follows shortly thereafter.
To be fair, this isn’t our first venture into poop studies.
One of the many age-appropriate books we feature in our Reading Room is Taro
Gomi’s hit “Everyone Poops,” first published in English in 1993. The final portion of the 16-page book explains that
because all animals eat, they must all therefore defecate. The book ends with
rear views of a human boy and six different animals defecating and a reprise of
the title: “Everyone poops.”
In Fairyland’s
case, “everyone” includes our chickens, rabbits, and lizard, as well as our (thankfully
mini) horses, donkeys, goats, and sheep. They’ll all soon have their poop
memorialized in the interest of science.
Our poop display will get
around. We plan to use it for our school visits, for our “Dr. Doolittle” school
field trips, for our “Mystery Week” at camp – campers will match an animal’s
poop with the animal – and for our weekend “Animal of the Day” presentations.
Fairyland animal caretaker
Melissa Tauber has already had success with poop during field-trip visits. When
the kids take a look at the bin she fills each day with animal poop, they’re vocally
impressed with the sheer volume.
I like to think that this
interest in animal poop will ignite a more general interest in science that
will lead “our” kids to pursue this area of study as they grow older.
Like our own Teresa, for example.
She started to tell me about how
and why rabbits eat their own poop to aid in digestion, but for me, that was
one poop too far. The littlest kids, however, love hearing all about it.
__
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 15 years as executive director of Children's Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the nation's first storybook theme park.
__
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 15 years as executive director of Children's Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the nation's first storybook theme park.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.