Launching seed balls, learning about plants and insects, engaging with interactive games and coloring were just some of the events that the Child Development Center's preschool and kindergarten classes participated in for Pollinator Day on Sept. 5.
91勛圖厙 hosted Pollinator Day, its first event since joining Bee Campus USA in December of last year. Bee Campus USA is a program from the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, a non-profit that works towards pollinator conservation.

The event featured Undergraduate Fellows from the Environmental Science and Design Research Institute and Biological Sciences students and staff conducting bee sampling demos, identifying pollinators and playing games with the centers children.
Kent States Bee Campus USA committee members, comprising professors, institute staff, University Facilities Management, the Office of Sustainability and the Office of the University Architect, hosted Pollinator Day to celebrate the campus pollinators and promote the importance of their conservation.
The committee thought we would launch our program by launching native flower seed bombs, Rebekkah Berryhill, grounds manager at Kent State, said. The seed bombs are created by mixing compost, native clays or flour, and seeds into a muddy slurry and then rolling the mixture into a round ball which can be thrown or dropped.
Berryhill told Kent State Today that the seed bombs slowly dissolve over the fall, winter and early spring months with different types of precipitation and temperature fluctuations.

Annie Engel, the centers lead preschool teacher, found that Pollinator Day was impactful for the children, and the lessons resonated with them.
I thought throwing the seed bombs was a great culmination at the end of our visit and will be exciting when the flowers come up in the spring, said Engel.
It was rewarding to see just how excited the children were to be outside, Katie McNamara Manning, Ph.D., coordinator of the institute's Fellows Program, said. They actually really loved going over to the garden and seeing the flowers, bees, beetles and other insects pointed out to them.
The Bee Campus USA committee had stations for the children to visit during the event. One station provided children with bees and butterfly masks to color. In another station children pretended to be pollinators by wearing butterfly and bee wing costumes.

One of the games was learning how insects, including pollinators, see with a compound eye, Leah Graham, sustainability coordinator for Kent State, said. The kids had goggles they could try on and wear, so they understand that pollinators see the world differently.
The children created native plant seed balls before the event, which they then launched into fields on the way back to the field to help develop and enhance pollinator habitat on campus.
We did a countdown, and they launched them into a field, said Graham. In the spring, when they walk past, theyll be able to see the plants they planted and created the habitat for our campus pollinators.
The Office of Sustainability and University Facilities Management Grounds Department recently hosted a seed bomb-making workshop in the Herrick Conservatory Greenhouse. These new seed bombs will be launched later in October.

I think this event was great to see the Kent State students and professors sharing their knowledge and information with the younger group of children, said Graham. The next generation is coming up, and its nice for students to share their interest and passions with the kids.