top of page
Purple Thistle.jpg

HOW TO BECOME

A MASTER NATURALIST

Purple Thistle.jpg

The Lowcountry Master Naturalist Class is a 12-session course designed to education people about the environment of the Lowcountry and of South Carolina. You will learn to "read" the landscape. The training is specifically designed to create a group of people that are well informed about the local environment. 

The course includes several excursions to locations around the Lowcountry and sessions that will be held on Spring Island. The fee of the course also includes several excellent guidebooks and other materials. Classes are from 9:00am-3:00pm on Wednesdays in the fall and the spring. Upon completing the course and 30 hours of volunteer service, you will receive designation as a Master Naturalist. 

 

Sponsor: The Lowcountry Institute, Outreach Initiative of The Spring Island Trust

Location: Okatie, SC

Spring Class Date: Wednesdays from February - May

Fall Class Dates: Wednesdays from September - December

 

To become a Master Naturalist, please email masternaturalist@lowcountryinstitute.org. This program is very popular with a 1-2 year waitlist to join a session. 

Volunteer Requirements

The purpose of the volunteer service requirement of the SC Master Naturalist Program is to provide a service to the community/region or state with regard to natural resources; to help the volunteer gain knowledge and experience; and to support the work of the State Office, partner agencies and Host Sites through their volunteerism.

Volunteer Service Requirements

In addition to the in-person training, the requirements for certification as a South Carolina Master Naturalist include 30 hours per year of approved volunteer work. Eight of these 30 hours are required to be Advanced Training

Requirements For Projects

Projects must involve educating the public, enhancing the natural resources of our state, or other approved functions (see examples below). In general, volunteer projects must fall into one of the four main areas: Citizen Science projects, Ecological Services projects, Education and Interpretation, or Coordination for the Master Naturalist program.

Tracking Volunteer Hours

Master Naturalist volunteer service hours are very important to the SC Master Naturalist program and its many affiliated organizations. The hours that you report, the educational service you provide to the visitors to our parks, and the environmental service projects in which you participate demonstrate your value and the value of the SC Master Naturalist Program to the state of South Carolina.

Hours are recorded through the Master Naturalist Online Volunteer Hour Reporting System. This is the only method used to track your volunteer hours at the state level. Log hours here!

What Constitutes a Good Volunteer Project? 

The hallmarks of a good volunteer project include but are not limited to good organization of the volunteer opportunity; appropriate tools to conduct the activity; opportunity for the volunteer to engage himself/herself in the natural resource related activity (i.e., a learning experience); good communication (including respect and appreciation) between the volunteer and the person or organization requesting the service; opportunity for reflection or connecting with others; strong purpose for the activity; and a reasonably safe environment. The project should fall within the four categories of activities discussed above and listed below.

What Doesn't Count Toward Volunteer Service Hours? 

An activity that primarily benefits the volunteer or activities with a political agenda will not count toward volunteer hours. Examples of this include but are not limited to: work conducted on your own property of which you are the primary beneficiary (potentially excepting demonstration projects); projects on public or private lands that benefit an individual or business; organizing a letter writing campaign to support a political agenda or viewpoint and advocacy work toward the same.

For questionable volunteer service opportunities, please work with local chapters or Host Sites. See the website for contact information on these. The State Office reserves the right to refuse a project for volunteer hours if it falls significantly outside the four categories of service or abuses the definition of a good volunteer project.

Only members scheduled to give a presentation may include preparation time as part of volunteer service hours. Travel time greater than 30 minutes and up to one hour for each project can be counted

What Are Volunteer Incentives?

As you graduate through the Master Naturalist program, you will be given an incentive nametag. These special nametags, made from a renewable wood (Alnus rubra), are intended to help you serve with pride. As you accumulate hours, you will be rewarded with state-occurring gemstones for each year of volunteerism. For individual years, one amethyst (SC state gemstone) will be placed in your nametag in one of the five small holes in the nametag. Awarding of amethysts is handled by the Association and/or Host Site. The hole closest to the logo is intended as an incentive for you to become a Statewide Master Naturalist. This training prepares you to train others and helps to make you competent in two biographical regions other than the one in which you initially took training. Earn this designation and you will receive an emerald from the State office.

  • Instagram
bottom of page