Seeing science’s surprises
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A few years ago, some of Jeff Nelsen’s friends gave him a live
lobster as a gift. Nelsen, who teaches the Science Discoveries Camp
in Newport Beach, named the animal “Lucky.”
Tuesday, Nelsen placed a handful of sea urchins in the classroom’s
water tank, planning to have students examine them under microscopes
the next day. Unfortunately for the class, Lucky was hungry that
night. By Wednesday morning, all that remained in the tank -- besides
Lucky -- was one live sea urchin and a few fragments of others.
“He turns the animal over and there’s no spine,” Nelsen explained.
“So he takes his front legs and pecks open the shell and eats. It’s
kind of a delicacy to them. It is to people in a sushi bar too.”
So the 6- to 12-year-olds in the class got an unexpected lesson in
marine biology: survival of the fittest.
“Mine is still moving a little,” said Briana Rappaport, 12, of
Laguna Beach, as she observed a wavering half of an urchin on her
plate glass.
Fortunately, urchin viewing was just one item of the curriculum
last week for the Science Discoveries Camp, held Monday through
Friday at Harbor Day School. Students also made crystals out of Epsom
salts and water; concocted “mystery matter” out of glue, water and
soap; and went digging on the beach for grunion eggs.
Nelsen, who used to work as a biologist for the Orange County
Marine Institute in Dana Point, established the Ocean Adventure
Program in Newport Beach in 1977. The offerings each summer include
an art camp, skateboarding and skim boarding, and a “minnows” science
camp for 5- to 7-year-olds.
The most elaborate is the Science Discoveries Camp, which includes
chemistry, physics, biology and earth sciences in its weeklong
program.
Much of the learning takes place in the classroom at Harbor Day
School -- a private school for kindergarten through eighth grade --
but the camp also makes daily trips to the beach.
July 25, the students found grunion eggs in the sand and brought
them back to the lab for examination.
“We were just digging, and we found these orange little eggs, and
we asked Jeff what they were,” said Jessie Bunting, 9, of Laguna
Beach. “There were a few water bottles that people had emptied, so we
filled them with sand and water and put the eggs inside.”
Under the microscope, the tiny eggs showed surprising signs of
life.
“You can sometimes see the heartbeat and the eyes,” Jessie said.
* SCHOOL’S OUT is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Michael Miller visits a summer camp within the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about the experience.
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