Hypancistrus
New member
So I've got two of my 9 snakes in my classroom, and the kids are very much interested in them. My students are between 14 and 18 years old, your standard American high school students. Many of them aren't very interested in school, period, and especially not in their current science classes, whose curriculum has been "adapted" to help them succeed in passing mandated state science tests (if you think biology as a course should be taught without ever touching on the following things-- human body systems, taxonomy, animal phyla, plant physiology & biology-- then move to MD, you'll be right at home).
But it just so happens that I've found a way to get them a little more interested in science... under the table if you will.
My Children's Python, Chaos, is a rather nice snake who doesn't give a rats hindquarters where he eats, so long as the mouse is warm. So I can hold him in my hand and let him eat... and in doing so I can actually walk around my classroom so all the kids can see.
I've done this three times since I discovered how casual he is about where he feeds, always to much applause and enjoyment by my students.
And it's not just about the snake eating the frozen mouse... they ask really good questions. Questions that need answering, like... "Do snakes poop?" "How do they breed?" "How can he fit that big mouse in there?" "What happens once it goes down?" "Why can't snakes eat pellets?"
Among others.....
I actually feel very much accomplished after a snake feeding session. I know it sounds stupid, but I feel like watching Chaos eat just one tiny mouse gets my kids more excited and inspired to question the world around them than the entire year of county mandated curriculum does.
I've also had very few students who wouldn't watch. I had one girl who complained loudly about how "cruel" it was... and she couldn't tear her eyes away once the feeding started.
I am thinking about taking my ambassador snakes into school at some point in the not-so-distant future, and letting kids hold them. My Jungly corn, Rio, is basically bullet proof. He's a real sweet heart-- has never hissed, struggled, bit, thrashed, musked or even pretended to do these things. I can't help but think... if seeing one snake feeding gets them excited... holding a snake would not only put them over the edge, but help to dispel some of the myths surrounding snakes.
Anyone else take their snakes around for community or school outreach? I would love to hear what all people do to rid the world of snake fears and hatred.
But it just so happens that I've found a way to get them a little more interested in science... under the table if you will.
My Children's Python, Chaos, is a rather nice snake who doesn't give a rats hindquarters where he eats, so long as the mouse is warm. So I can hold him in my hand and let him eat... and in doing so I can actually walk around my classroom so all the kids can see.
I've done this three times since I discovered how casual he is about where he feeds, always to much applause and enjoyment by my students.
And it's not just about the snake eating the frozen mouse... they ask really good questions. Questions that need answering, like... "Do snakes poop?" "How do they breed?" "How can he fit that big mouse in there?" "What happens once it goes down?" "Why can't snakes eat pellets?"
Among others.....
I actually feel very much accomplished after a snake feeding session. I know it sounds stupid, but I feel like watching Chaos eat just one tiny mouse gets my kids more excited and inspired to question the world around them than the entire year of county mandated curriculum does.
I've also had very few students who wouldn't watch. I had one girl who complained loudly about how "cruel" it was... and she couldn't tear her eyes away once the feeding started.
I am thinking about taking my ambassador snakes into school at some point in the not-so-distant future, and letting kids hold them. My Jungly corn, Rio, is basically bullet proof. He's a real sweet heart-- has never hissed, struggled, bit, thrashed, musked or even pretended to do these things. I can't help but think... if seeing one snake feeding gets them excited... holding a snake would not only put them over the edge, but help to dispel some of the myths surrounding snakes.
Anyone else take their snakes around for community or school outreach? I would love to hear what all people do to rid the world of snake fears and hatred.