Tortoise Group Information Sheet # 20

 

TORTOISES IN THE CLASSROOM
CONCERNS AND ALTERNATIVES


The following also pertains to American Box Turtles, water turtles, and other reptiles

To quote from an article by Susan M. Tellem, RN. on Salmonella in the California Turtle and Tortoise Club, Tortuga Gazette: A teacher is a sitting duck for a lawsuit should any of the children in the classroom get infected. Teachers know the risks, so if a parent were to sue for a million dollars (much more if the child dies) , the parent will win. It is not worth the risk. . . ."

Keeping tortoises in the classroom promotes the idea that this is adequate care when it is not. Teachers are in a powerful position to teach by example, good or bad.

Tortoise Group has written a pamphlet, Desert Tortoises, Adoption and Care. It is available, free, from public libraries and animal hospitals throughout the County. Additional information on the care of captive desert tortoises may be obtained by contacting Tortoise Group at (702) 739-8043, 873-3500 or 648-5190, or by visiting our website http://www.tortoisegroup.org/.

We urge teachers not to allow the school to be a place for distribution of unwanted hatchlings. The parents need to be involved and be given the opportunity to accept the responsibility of having a tortoise. Children cannot prepare the proper outdoor area and follow through with adequate care.

Let Tortoise Group help you with alternatives to keeping tortoises in the classroom: Call us at 739-8043

1. Teachers may prepare their home yards and adopt a tortoise from Tortoise Group. Then, on occasion, take the tortoise into the classroom for a day visit, giving the tortoise the freedom of the classroom. A parent could take their tortoise to visit for part of an hour.

2. Establish a proper outdoor enclosure on school grounds. Customizing a tortoise habitat within the confines of school property is usually a special challenge, unique to each school and requires more than knowing how to create that habitat in a residence yard. Tortoise Group staff has experience in assisting school staff to meet the needs of the tortoise in the school setting.

3. Invite a Tortoise Group volunteer to bring a tortoise into the classroom to give an informative presentation to individual classes, call 873-3500. The National Park Service, Red Rock Visitor Center staff and others with the Clark County Desert Conservation Program (455-2860) also perform this service.

TG/3/03

 

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