Grant let teachers study outside box

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In this June 5, 2012 photo provided by Kristi Mullinix, teachers Kristi Mullinix (right) and Teri Moore, from South Shores School in Decatur are seen on Admiralty Island, Alaska, during a wilderness trip funded with a grant from Archer Daniels Midland Co. The idea of the trip was to give teachers a firsthand experience with brown bears, which are abundant in Alaska, and provide material for lessons for their students. Both teachers plan units on bears and Alaska next quarter and brought back plenty of photos to show the students. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Kristi Mullinix)
In this June 5, 2012 photo provided by Kristi Mullinix, teachers Kristi Mullinix (right) and Teri Moore, from South Shores School in Decatur are seen on Admiralty Island, Alaska, during a wilderness trip funded with a grant from Archer Daniels Midland Co. The idea of the trip was to give teachers a firsthand experience with brown bears, which are abundant in Alaska, and provide material for lessons for their students. Both teachers plan units on bears and Alaska next quarter and brought back plenty of photos to show the students. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Kristi Mullinix)
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DECATUR (AP) — A week in the Alaska wilderness, getting around by kayak and roughing it, led South Shores School teacher Teri Moore to keep a list of "28 Things I've Never Done Before."

"We had never kayaked in our lives," said fellow teacher Kristi Mullinix, who applied for a grant from Archer Daniels Midland Co. that helped pay for the trip. "Teri had always camped in places where you can walk to the bathroom."

Mullinix saw a grant application for teachers to "think outside the box" and ask for assistance doing something they had always wanted to share with students but never thought they'd be able to.

She Googled such terms as "teacher seminars in Alaska" and found a company that led expeditions for teachers. She didn't want to go alone, so she asked Moore to accompany her. Moore agreed, without realizing quite how primitive the experience would be.

"She'd say, 'We're going to need this,' and I'd say, 'What for?' and she'd say, 'We're going to be camping,' and I said, 'We're going to what?' " Moore said with a laugh.

The idea of the trip was to give teachers a firsthand experience with brown bears, which are abundant in Alaska, and provide material for lessons for their students. Both teachers plan units on bears and Alaska next quarter and brought back plenty of photos to show the students.

"It was kind of like 'Survivor,' " Mullinix said. "They dropped us off on this island with all our gear and said, 'We'll see you in a week.' And the next six days, we saw one boat, and other than that, we did not see anybody."

For the bears, a couple of the guides carried guns, but one carried bear spray. He told the group of teachers that you spray the bear for three seconds and then run right or left, but not straight, because that's the direction the bear will charge.

During one stop at a shelter, they heard bears nearby and had to leave the shelter because the bears were coming that way, and a few minutes later, a bear walked right past the open side of the shelter where they'd been sitting.

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