Posts Tagged ‘zoo volunteers’

Introducing… Paul Bishop

Posted by in Education Office,Volunteer Programs

To continue our series introducing the EduTeer Staff, we’ll head over to the Volunteer section…

Name: Paul Bishop

Title: Volunteer Programs Supervisor

Paul getting a smooch from one of our sea lions, Cali.

Job Description: I provide supervision to all of our volunteer programs and the coordinators that run them. I directly supervise the docent program.

Hometown: Marshall, TX

Favorite animal and why?  My overall favorite animal is the gorilla, but my favorite here at the Houston Zoo is the white rhino. I just find them extremely interesting and their plight in the wild is an issue that needs more attention.

Favorite class to teach at HZI: I enjoy coordinating our docent training sessions. I probably learn as much as they do.

How long have you worked at the Houston Zoo? About 8 months.

Describe your education and experience prior to working at the Houston Zoo: I have over 11 years of coaching experience on both the collegiate and high school level. I also have over 6 years of experience in personnel training.

What do you enjoy most about working in the EduTeer Department? Everyone here comes to work with a great attitude and is genuinely happy to be here. I also like that you can learn something new here everyday.

What animals do you have at home? My wife and I have a cat named Bam. (But I wish we had a dog!)

Tell us a fun fact about yourself: While coaching the cheerleaders at the University of Oklahoma, I also coached Carl Albert High School to 4 straight State Championships and one Grand National Championship.

Keep checking back to find out more about the unique staff here in the EduTeer family!

Zoo Crew: Teen Volunteer Program

Posted by in Classes/Programs,Featured,Volunteer Programs

Some of our Education Zoo Crew, educating people about insects.

Zoo Crew is a unique program offered to youth between the ages of 13 and 17 who seek to enrich their lives and gain important job skills by volunteering at the Houston Zoo. The Zoo Crew program gives teens exposure to careers in the Zoo field while learning about animals and the conservation efforts and methods at the Houston Zoo, Inc. We currently have the program split into two (2) seasons.

Summer Zoo Crew: Teen volunteers participate in an eleven week volunteer program from the first week in June to the middle of August. During the summer first year Zoo Crew are able to apply for entry positions which include Education, Theatrical, and Camp Zoofari. Once returning they may apply for animal sections from Aquarium to Carnivores and most sections in between.

Fall Zoo Crew: Teen volunteers participate in a four month weekend volunteer program from the end of September to the first week in December focusing on Conservation. A day can consist of anything from educating on Zoo grounds about endangered species and recycling to participating in a Beach Clean Up in Galveston. 

As we wrap up the final months of 2010, we must acknowledge this years 307 Zoo Crew teen volunteers for all their contributions. From volunteering with Camp Zoofari, assisting animal keepers with their daily duties, on grounds giving a hand, or shall we say “green thumb”, to Horticulture, and last, but not least, focusing on Conservation. Finally throughout each area Zoo Crew volunteered a total of nearly 31,000 hours!

On the topic of recognition, I am pleased to announce our 2010 Zoo Crew Scholarship recipients: Shayak Sengupta, Elizabeth Garza, Elizabeth Poulin, Elizabeth Woodruff, Cailey Cotner and Lucy Martinez! Please join me with congratulating our Zoo Crew volunteers for their hard work and strong passion for animals and conservation.

For more information on Zoo Crew, please visit us at www.houstonzoo.org/teen or contact Patrick Cadriel at pcadriel@houstonzoo.org.

Written by Patrick, Volunteer Coordinator, Teen Programs

Rewarding Zoomobile Experience

Posted by in Classes/Programs,Featured,Zoomobile

The Houston Zoo's very own ZooMobile!

As the month of February ended and Spring Break came near, the Education Department’s schedule filled up very quickly. It’s spring which means lots of school fieldtrips and lots of ZooMobile program requests. As an Education Specialist at the Zoo, in a 5-day week you may do 4 ZooMobiles (each could be about 5 hours long including drive time), 3 Adventure Classes and even Safari School! Phew! It makes me tired just thinking about it, but we do it because we love it, and we know that educating children about the critical nature of our earth, wildlife and natural resources is imperative. Some programs are smoother than others, sometimes things just don’t seem to go your way but you deliver the best program you can because you know the kids deserve it.

On one occasion at the end of March of this year I went on one of the most rewarding ZooMobiles I have ever been on. It was a Tuesday and I remember packing up biofacts with one of our docents, Marcia. We discussed which bird skulls to take, which cat furs and which mammal claws to pack up. It was like any other Zoomobile until we got in the van. Marcia began to tell me how this elementary school came upon having the Zoo out to their school.

She told me that the school we were traveling to is where her daughter is a lead teacher. Well, I thought, this will be great! We will have a teacher that we know to control behavior so we can focus on the teaching…but that wasn’t all. Marcia’s daughter is a lead teacher in a school made up of mostly refugees from around the world. From Ethiopia to Iran and Venezuela, there were students who came from all walks of life with very different backgrounds, and some with very sad pasts. As well as having a school made up of mostly refugees, Marcia told me that most classes were barely learning English. This, I thought, was not out of the ordinary for the Houston area, except that their native languages weren’t necessarily Spanish. Similar to the areas where they were born, their native languages spanned from Portugese to Korean and Chinese. My language skills extend to Spanish, and only short phrases in French and Japanese…at this point I wasn’t sure if the kids would enjoy themselves at all if they couldn’t understand a word we were saying!

 To my surprise, and completely to the contrary of what I had expected, the kids loved the presentations. We improvised in Spanish; we made arm gestures and acted out scenes of birds, mammals and reptiles. We touched furs and skulls and live animals and tried to explain the rest. What didn’t come across in words certainly came out in smiles, movements and sounds. It turns out the ZooMobile can be so much more than an hour long presentation about animals. Animals and an appreciation of wildlife can transcend from any language and any culture, anywhere.

Not only did the kids enjoy themselves, but they earned it. Unable to pay for the ZooMobile presentations on their own, teachers from their school applied for a grant in order to award their hard-working students with a visit from the Zoo. The grant paid off for the kids, and the experience paid off for me. It doesn’t get much better than that!

Written by Martha, Education Programs Specialist

The Poo on Pooh

Posted by in Fun on grounds,Volunteer Programs

Look at the GIANT Grizzly Bear

Look at the GIANT Grizzly Bear

Ever wonder what it might be like to volunteer at the Houston Zoo? One of the volunteer opportunities we offer here at the Zoo is working as a Keeper Aide, where highly trained volunteers work alongside the keepers assisting them in some of their daily tasks. I think what Rochelle Joseph, a Zoo volunteer, had to say about her first day on the job speaks for itself:

 

I struggled to open the rediculously long, industrial strength plastic bag while wearing protective latex gloves, but I tried my best to mask it. I wanted to impress. This was the moment I’d been working toward, being a Keeper’s Aid, and I was given my first task — shoveling bear poop.   I knew it was a part of the job, but I supressed a chuckle when it was the first thing I was assigned. I wondered if it’s an inside joke among the staff to throw newbies right into it and see what they’re really made of. All I know is, I was determined to make it look like I’d been doing it all my life.

As I scooped up the morning-fresh puddle of gunk, I almost fell over from it’s…fragrance. Between that and the weight of the shovel and my gloves sticking to the bag that just would not stay put, I swung it best I could in the direction of the opening, and dumped. It mostly got on the sides, leaving me no clear spot from which to grab it and shake things down.

The smell made me care a little less about neatness and more about being done so I brought back the second scoop hoping my aim would be better. It was, but I still had to figure out how to carry the mess with me as I tidied the rest of the habitat. At that moment Richard, the very nice carnivore keeper took pity and showed me a way to roll and set the bag so I’ll do better next time. Still, I did all this with a wry smile on my face thinking: for the rest of my life, this will be a fun story to tell.

I admit, I was shaking in my knee high rubber boots when we first entered the enclosure.  I think it crosses everyone’s mind that there can be mistakes (if it doesn’t, you’ve probably done it too long).  Richard told me the bears were properly locked outside of their habitat so I plunged ahead, though it felt like I had ginger ale in my veins.  When I was done collecting carrot remnants and refilling their pool, I watched as he prepared their arthritis medicine. He mixed it with honey in a tupperware bowl, then headed around the corner with me in tow. He squatted down and I stopped short in my tracks. What I didn’t expect was to see a GIANT grizzly right THERE.

A GIANT bear, did I mention that? 

In my interview with the keepers the first 30 minutes were essentially warnings and outlined what I can’t do — for my and the animal’s safety. At the end they asked if I had any questions and I joked, “Um, what can I do?”  Well now, HERE I WAS, up close with my first giant beast!!  He was so big he disappeared into the shadows of the cage. Just his head was fully visible, apart from the general hulk of him — and it was massive, with thick dark fur just making it bigger!  I expected this bear to fling himself against the bars, roaring and swiping at the bowl with those claws as long as my fingers! I imagined we’d have to push the bowl toward him with a stick from a great distance, as if he were Hannibal Lecter.

But the keeper was kneeling close to the bars cooing to the bear, who had his paws curled up under him like a pussy cat. He was sweet and docile, and stuck his tongue way out of his long snout to reach the honey/meds in the bowl.

When the bear was done, the keeper stuck in the spoon and asked the bear softly if he’d like to lick it, which he did. Make no mistake, it was clear these animals are to be fully respected, and I could and should never attempt what a keeper might. They’ve been working with these animals closely for a very long time and know just what they’re doing.

You may know that these are old bears, who were rescued from a terrible former life, who now gratefully soak up the seemingly boundless love and excellent care they receive at the Zoo, and maybe that accounts for it — but this ruddy, masculine keeper’s tenderness toward them was a great example of the effect that animals of all kinds have on people’s hearts.

When I became a volunteer I knew I cared enough to realize that the animals would affect me, but just how much so was yet to be seen…..

 

To learn more about some of Rochelle’s adventures as a Houston Zoo Volunteer, check out some of her other blog posts.

To become a Houston Zoo Volunteer yourself, check out some of our other volunteer opportunities. We will begin accepting new volunteer applications again by the end of the month.

National Volunteer Appreciation Week

Posted by in Volunteer Programs

National Volunteer Week at the Houston ZooToday is the first day of National Volunteer Appreciation Week. In 2008, Houston Zoo volunteers gave over 50,000 hours of service to the Zoo helping out with special events, administrative projects, teaching classes, working alongside the keepers and just about everything in between.

As one of the Volunteer Programs Coordinators at the Zoo, it is an absolute honor to work with this talented bunch of people. Next time you’re at the Zoo and see someone in a blue Houston Zoo volunteer shirt, join me in giving them a big ole thanks for all their work and ask them how you can join us in all the fun.