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GPS Technology in the Classroom and Geocaching

In my previous article I talked about one of my new favorite hobbies, Geocaching.  If you are not sure what geocaching is or how it works please visit geocaching.com for more details.  I pondered on how this cool technology could be used with students.  I have noticed that my own children’s knowledge of directionality, judging distance, and map skills have significantly increased since we began Geocaching.  The challenge with integrating Geocaching into the classroom, is that we are relatively limited in where we can go.  I’m quite sure that a bus couldn’t't make it to the places I have been, and the liabilities of taking a fourth grade class climbing up a 30 foot cliff  are just a little to great.  I think you will find that with a little searching you are likely to find a safe Geocache withing walking distance of of the school.  If not you can always create one or two.  I have thought about using the concept to create small learning stations scattered throughout our school grounds and then we could do an activity where in small groups students can find the learning stations using a GPS then complete the activities.  I also think it would be fun to set up a geocache of our own as a class.  to make it interesting for visitors we could include a book of student works such as poems or short stories .  As people visit they will leave feedback and comments about your Geocache site that students can check periodically.  These are just a few ways I have thought of to integrate GPS and geocaching in my classroom activities next year.  Please ad your suggested activities in the comments.

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  • #1
    Posted by marian on June 14th, 2007 at 11:04 pm

    This article is great. Geocaching.com. More knowledge of directional. Great in Schools. Great help for a teacher. Glad to read this article.
    Activity:
    For the students like music… Try I like. come

  • #2
    Posted by Chris Duke on July 7th, 2007 at 3:45 pm

    I first explored Geocaching because of the potential educational applications; after finding our first three using printouts from Google Maps, the entire family and I were hooked. A year of Geocaching and the educational applications got lost in the excitement. Several possible educational applications. Local history: hide, perhaps as a class, a cache near a local historical marker or location; require the cache description to include a summary of the historically significant details. Physical Education: offer course credit for learners that go geocaching with family/friends and save/upload/share their GPS tracks ported to Google Earth to show where they’ve been. Team Building: divide into teams to find multicaches on campus that require teams to interact and share knowledge to be successful.

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