Abstract [eng] |
The tool discussed in the article, intended for teachers, emphasizes the complex study of the school's natural environment, which is not the work of a single subject teacher, but the work of the entire team of school teachers with students. All chapters contain specific subject specific instructions on how to carry out one or another research or observation, how to document and record observed phenomena, objects, processes, what tools are needed to carry out a specific research, and advice on how to make them. It is understood that the exposure situation has changed. Some of the mentioned outcrops are already glazed or hidden under a considerable layer of deluvium. However, it is possible that a new outcrop has formed in another part of the same river slope. It should reveal geological layers similar to those described. In this way, even today, this "Guide..." can be useful for a teacher working with children in nature. You just need to check the terms. Some may be obsolete. This tool would be especially valuable for those starting to create local history museums in schools. The only drawback is that it is too heavy to carry to the research objects. I would think that even nowadays it is possible to assemble a team of scientists who, after revising the tool at the level of today's scientific knowledge, would publish it in one publication, consisting of several parts taken separately when going out into nature. I hope this retrospective will become a perspective. |