PLAN OF STUDY
Begin as soon after the first of January
as possible. Assign two periods a week of from
ten to twenty minutes each for bird study in the school.
Continue the work during these periods until after
the celebration of Bird Day in May.
If no other bird is to be found, the English sparrow will answer. Place
the following questions upon the blackboard:
THE ENGLISH SPARROW
How long is this bird
from the tip of its beak to the end of
its tail?
What is the color of
its head? Of its throat? Of its breast?
Of the underparts of
its body? Of its back? Of its wings?
What is the length,
shape, and color of its bill?
What is the color of its legs and feet?
How many toes upon each foot, and which way do
they point? Does it walk, hop, or run upon
the ground? Is its tail square, or notched?
Is its flight even and steady, or bounding?
What is the difference in appearance between
the male and female?
The children should be directed to
answer these questions from their own observation,
at the next period of study. For the lowest grades
two or three questions will be enough for the first
attempt, and even then the variety of answers will
be surprising.
No other questions should be taken
until the first are answered correctly.
The teacher should have an opera glass
or a small field glass with which to make her own
observations. It is obvious that the more glasses
there are among the children, the better. It is
advisable for the teacher to make short excursions
with the children to the streets to assist them in
answering these questions. These can be made at
the close of school. As a preparation, have some
crumbs or seeds scattered where the birds have been
seen.
Continue work with these questions
until each one can give a reasonably accurate description
of the appearance of the bird and of its movements.
Have the older pupils write this. It will make
a good language lesson.
The next questions should have reference
to the life and characteristics of the bird.
What does it eat? Put out crumbs or scraps of
meat and see if the bird will eat them. What sounds
does the bird make? Does it sing? Imitate
as many of its sounds as you can. Determine from
its actions what its disposition is. For example Is
it courageous? Is it quarrelsome? Is it
inclined to fight? Is it selfish?
Frequently a single incident in a
bird’s life will furnish an answer to several
of these questions. Two sparrows were seen attempting
to take possession of the same straw. Each held
firmly to his end of the straw. A regular tug
of war ensued. They pulled one another about for
some time on the top of an awning, and finally, becoming
tired of this, they dropped the straw and furiously
attacked each other. They fought with beak and
claw, paying no attention to the spectators, and fell
exhausted to the sidewalk, where they lay upon their
backs until able to hop slowly away from each other.
It was some little time before they recovered strength
to fly in opposite directions, conquering and unconquered.
Early in March advise the children
to watch the direction of the sparrows’ flight.
They will discover that some of them are carrying
straws or feathers or other material for nest building.
Notice the position and style of these nests.
Those built early in the season are always in protected
places, under the eaves of houses or in holes in trees
or in bird boxes. Some of those built later are
in exposed places, clumsy affairs, but well thatched
with straw, having an entrance on one side. This
nest building may be watched during the entire season,
for the English sparrow raises more broods than any
other of our birds.
The interpretation of the actions
which indicate any of a bird’s characteristics
is a valuable part of the study on account of its
exercise of the imagination and the reason.
A plan similar to the foregoing should
be followed with each bird that is studied. With
almost all other birds the study will be far more
interesting. The English sparrow may be considered
as the A B C of birds in his appearance and in the
kind of life he leads. He is therefore a good
subject to begin with. But even he will be found
to exhibit unexpected individuality.
After a few days of this study, or
at least before the spring birds begin to arrive,
direct the children to try the following experiments.
Scatter crumbs where they may be seen from the windows.
Nail cups in the trees containing sugar and water,
and others containing seeds. Nail up a bone or
two, and a piece of suet as large as your two hands.
This last will be relished by the birds, for it provides
the kind of food most needed in cold weather.
Watch carefully the birds that are
attracted by the food. After feeding awhile they
will become quite tame and may be closely approached.
Write a description of each bird upon the plan used
for the English sparrow. Encourage the children
to add any observations of their own which throw light
upon the habits and character of the birds, since
one object of this study is the development of right
feeling toward them.
Among the first to arrive will probably
be the blue jay, chickadee, or black-capped titmouse,
and one or more of the woodpeckers. These all
show individual character and are well worth studying.
The blue jay by his striking appearance
and outlandish voice challenges attention. He
will be found to possess some gentlemanly traits.
To illustrate, a number of blue jays were seen taking
turns, waiting in line, to feed upon a bone where
there was room for only one at a time. There
was no scramble, no hurrying of the one who was eating.
The blue jay is a most devoted parent, though not considered
a good citizen by other birds. Contrary to the
usual belief, he has a beautiful song. It is
sweet and low and almost as varied as the catbird’s,
and can be heard only a short distance. It has
a reminiscent character, as if he were thinking of
past joys.
The black-capped titmouse or the chickadee
is noticeable for his sprightliness and cheeriness,
and for his trim, tailor-made appearance. Emerson’s
poem worthily celebrates his brave spirit. He
flits around a limb and clings to it with his head
up or down, with his feet up or down, as if his movements
were not physical exertions, but mental efforts.
His simple little song rings out at all hours of the
coldest day.
The woodpecker gives himself freely
to study. One winter we frequently counted from
twelve to fourteen children standing under the tree
on which a little sapsucker was at work. The
upturned faces of the children did not disturb him
at all, although he was only a little above their
heads. He drilled away as if his work in the world
was the work which must be done. A downy woodpecker
with a slightly wounded wing was brought into one
of our schoolrooms, where he lived contentedly for
several days, pecking a dead treetop, which the boys
brought in for him after a good deal of thought and
several excursions. The only food he seemed to
like was sweetened water, although the children brought
him a great variety to choose from. No visitor
to a schoolroom ever produced a better effect.
His presence, instead of interfering with the regular
order, pleased the children, and they did their work
even better than usual. When his wing was healed
he was dismissed from school through the window, and
his flight to a neighboring treetop was anxiously
watched.
Upon many other occasions wounded
birds have been brought into our schools. Some
recovered and others died, but each visit was an epoch
in the life of the school.
The other birds most likely to visit
this feast during January are the flicker, crow, purple
finch, song sparrow, white-breasted nuthatch, snow-flake;
American crossbill, white-throated sparrow, tree sparrow,
junco, winter wren, golden-crowned kinglet, brown creeper,
and even the solitary robin. The sparrow hawk
and the sharp-shinned hawk may visit the vicinity
to feed upon the other feeders. On the first of
January I saw a sparrow hawk sitting on the spire of
a church in the heart of a city of eighteen thousand
people. After selecting a victim from the sparrows
on the street below, he calmly spread his wings and
pounced upon him, or with no effort at concealment
chased the bird whose flight was nearest.
A female sparrow hawk wintered in
the eaves of an apartment house in Morningside Park,
New York City. English sparrow was its principal
diet, and every morning and afternoon an observer might
have seen the hawk soar to the park grounds on its
hunting trips.
A few years ago a sharp-shinned hawk
visited our yard. Apparently he lived upon the
sparrows there for several days. There was no
skill in his hunting or effort to take the game unawares.
When he wanted a bird he simply left his perch and
captured it by speed of wing. His ease of flight
was remarkable; as a little boy said, “He just
opened his wings and sailed away.” He stayed
until the sparrows left the neighborhood.
As the season advances the birds will
come in greater numbers. On the first of April
a little girl in one of our schools had identified
and described seventeen different species of birds
which she had seen in her yard. The same child
fed a family of chipping sparrows; they became so
tame that they would come to meet her when she came
with crumbs, and would pick them up even when they
dropped close to her feet. The next year this
family evidently came again and raised another brood
and brought them along to be fed, for seven and sometimes
eight would come when she called. The English
sparrow came also, and the little maid drove them
away without the chippies being disturbed. A
boy from one of our schools was even more fortunate.
In his yard were a number of trees in which ample
provision had been made for the birds. Late in
April, with other kinds a pair of scarlet tanagers
and a pair of rose-breasted grosbeaks visited the trees.
These stayed and soon seemed to feel quite at home.
To the great delight of their neighbors, the house-dwellers,
they built their nests, the grosbeaks in a tree near
one side of the porch, the tanagers in one near the
opposite side. They became so friendly that sometimes
when the boy came out upon the porch and played softly
on a mouth organ, the grosbeak’s silvery warble
and the tanager’s loud, clear voice joined him.
Brief written descriptions should be made by the pupils, similar to the
following:
BLUEBIRD. Length, six and
a half inches; extent of wings, about twelve
inches; color, back, azure blue; throat, breast,
and sides, dull crimson; underpart, white; bill and
legs, blackish; eye, brown; arrives early in March;
leaves in late November. Song, soft and
pleasing warble; sings both in flight and at
rest; nests in holes of trees or posts, or in
bird houses.
CHICKADEE. Length, about
five and a half inches; extent of wings, about
eight inches; legs, bluish gray; bill, black; back,
brownish gray; throat, chin, and top of head, black;
sides of head, white; underparts, whitish; wing
and tail feathers margined with white; nests
in holes in trees and stumps. The common
name arises from their familiar note of “chic-a-dee-dee.”
CATBIRD. Length, nine inches;
extent of wings, eleven and a half inches; bill
and feet, black; eye, brown; color, slate color,
somewhat lighter beneath; top of head and tail, black;
reddish under the wings; arrives in May, leaves in
October; nests in bushes; lives in gardens and
woodside thickets; has a sharp cry not unlike
the mewing of a cat, but is a gifted songster.
MEADOW LARK. Length, about
ten and a half inches; extent of wings, about
sixteen and a half inches; female is smaller; body,
thick and stout; legs, large; hind toe reaches out
beyond the tail, its claw twice as long as the
middle one; bill, brown, lighter at the base,
dark towards the point; feet and legs, light
brown; throat, breast, and edge of wing, bright
yellow; breast with a large black crescent; nests
on the ground in the open field; clumsy in flight and
in walking; song, a plaintive whistle; arrives
in March, leaves in October.
BARN SWALLOW. Length, six
and three fourths inches; spread of wings, twelve
and a half inches; bill, black; legs and feet,
light brown; color, upper parts glossy steel blue;
tail, very deeply forked, outer tail feathers
much longer and narrower than the others; forehead,
chin, and throat, deep chestnut; rest of the
underparts lighter; nests usually in barns.
WOOD THRUSH. Length, eight
inches; spread of wings, thirteen inches; legs
and feet, flesh-colored; bill, blackish, lighter
at base; upper parts cinnamon brown, brightest
on top of the head, and shading into olive near the
tail; lower parts white and marked with roundish, dusky
spots; arrives the first of May, leaves in October.
Song consists of sweet, ringing, bell-like notes.
Later these outlines should be expanded
into free descriptions, containing all that the pupil
has learned about the bird, his habits, his character,
and his life.
Each school should aim to possess
a bird manual, for the identification of the species.
The following are recommended as sufficient for the
purpose: “Birds of the United States,”
by A. C. Apgar; “Birds of Eastern North America,”
by Frank M. Chapman; “Bird Craft,” by
Mabel Osgood Wright; “Birds of Pennsylvania,”
second edition, by Warren (this may possibly be obtained
at second-hand bookstores); “Our Common Birds
and How to Know Them,” by Grant. The report
of your own state upon birds, if there is one, will
also furnish valuable information.