Zebra mussels, an aquatic species that invaded North America in 1988, have caused some very serious economic and environmental problems. They are rapidly spreading beyond the Great Lakes region into many waterways in the Midwest, and even into the Northeast (zebra mussels have already been found in the Connecticut River and Lake Champlain). MIT Sea Grant is tuning kids into zebra mussels and other exotic species through a new and exciting science called the Zebra Mussel Mania Traveling Trunk. Developed by Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant, the trunk is filled with ten hands-on activities that provide educators with tools to teach about the full range of problems associated with zebra mussels and other nonindigenous species. Use of the trunk encourages students to inquire and discover. What makes the trunk even more effective is the integration of other subjects, including math, English, social studies, and the arts.
Through experiments, games, stories, and a host of other interesting activities, students will be better able to understand problems caused by nonindigenous species and will learn how to become involved in solutions to prevent the spread of these species through community action projects.
What is Zebra Mussel Mania?
It's the title of the curriculum guide that accompanies the Zebra Mussel
Traveling Trunk.
Who developed this zebra mussel resource kit?
The Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant Program and the Illinois River Project selected
fifth- and sixth-grade teachers to develop the curriculum and related
activities. Curriculum development specialists from the Illinois River Project
at Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville and the Bell Museum of Natural
History in Minnesota ensured that the teaching materials meet established
science education standards. Although designed with Midwest waterways and
students in mind, the trunk is nevertheless general enough to be useful to a New
England audience.
Where can you obtain a Traveling Trunk?
The trunk is available through the Center for Marine Social Sciences of the MIT
Sea Grant College Program.