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Brief

From Curiosity to Conservation Careers

Conservation Connect Links Wildlife, Technology, and Careers With In- and Out-of-School Learning

Article: 12420456 | Published online: 17 Apr 2024
 

Graphical Abstract

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Conservation Connect, a freely available video series, connects learners to wildlife, technology, and careers.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Conservation Connect, a freely available video series, connects learners to wildlife, technology, and careers.

Abstract

Students find meaning and relevance in their learning when they connect lessons to real-world issues and possible career paths. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS) Conservation Connect, a freely available video series, connects learners to wildlife, technology, and careers. Videos and supplementary resources are designed to serve middle school youth, but elementary and high school educators—and even FWS retirees—report that they also use the tools. Each episode features a species, a conservation career, and technology that professionals use to study or protect that species and its habitat. Videos run from five to eight minutes and portray conservation professionals studying wildlife using technology—such as radio transmitters, webcams, and electrofishing boats—and safety gear, such as life vests, protective gear for feeding young black-footed ferrets, and helmets and rock climbing equipment for repelling off cliffs to count California condor eggs. Episodes focus on animals from mammals and insects, to reptiles and amphibians, to waterfowl and birds of prey. Students learn about careers in such fields as fish and wildlife biology, law enforcement, and environmental education.

Author Contributions

Maria Parisi ([email protected]) is youth program analyst at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Falls Church, Virginia.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Maria Parisi

Maria Parisi ([email protected]) is youth program analyst at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Falls Church, Virginia.

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