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Chattahoochee
High School's Green School Environmental Club recognized a serious
pollution problem on their school grounds. They became concerned
about the condition of a large retention pond situated between their
high school and the Taylor Road Middle School. Recently, the pond
had become polluted with debris and petroleum fuel run-off from
nearby roads and parking lots. The students became alarmed because
they knew that the retention pond was geographically in and around
the headwaters of John's Creek, a major tributary of the Chattahoochee
River. This river system was also the main source of Alpharetta's
drinking water.
As
a result, the students worked to create the ARCH Education Network.
The acronym is short for "Active Riparian Commensal Habitats".
The idea was to convert their water detention pond into a water
retention pond. Instead of just slowing the water down, they wanted
to design the pond is such a way that would filter out the majority
of the non-point source pollutants that were entering the watershed.
The students worked to raise money for the project and sought the
help of government officials and local business leaders. They were
able to secure a $240,000 grant from the Community Development Fund
with the help of Johnny Isakson, a member of the U.S. Congress.
With
the help of a professional engineering company, the students worked
to design a wetland habitat and outdoor amphitheater to be used
for educational purposes. The new wetland will serve as a natural
filter, removing pollutants before the water reaches John's Creek.
ARCH has worked to enhance the school curriculum by utilizing the
environment as an integrative context for learning. The Green School
Environmental Club was able to raise another $50,000 in donations
and secured an additional $25,000 grant from General Electric. The
G.E. grant was utilized to train teachers to use the ARCH as an
educational tool. The students even produced a virtual-reality tour
of the ARCH site. Future plans include the installation of interactive
"talking trees" and lighting for nighttime use. The Green
School Environmental Club hopes to build a greenhouse to facilitate
the propagation of milkweed plants. Eventually, they would like
to research the migratory habits of the Monarch butterfly. The greenhouse
will also serve to provide students with training in horticultural
techniques.
According
to the National Geographic Society, "The ARCH Educational Network,
envisioned and created by the Green School Environmental Club and
the AP Environmental Science Club of Chattahoochee High School,
is a model environmental program that could be replicated in other
communities. They have taken a "real estate eye sore"
retention pond and transformed it into an instrument to energize
the curriculum, from art to zoology. This is a fine example of a
project that engages students in higher order thinking and geographic
analysis with positive results affecting their entire community."
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