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The Worldwide Student Climate Research Campaign 2011-2013

The Worldwide Student Climate Research Campaign 2011-2013. Dr. Edward Geary and Dr. Donna Charlevoix The GLOBE Program UCAR Community Programs----Boulder, Colorado. May 7, 2009 --- Goddard Space Flight Center. Overview. A Brief Look at the Evolution of GLOBE … 1995-2009 GLOBE Assets

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The Worldwide Student Climate Research Campaign 2011-2013

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  1. The Worldwide Student Climate Research Campaign 2011-2013 Dr. Edward Geary and Dr. Donna Charlevoix The GLOBE Program UCAR Community Programs----Boulder, Colorado May 7, 2009 --- Goddard Space Flight Center

  2. Overview • A Brief Look at the Evolution of GLOBE … 1995-2009 • GLOBE Assets • Why a Student Climate Research Campaign? • Target Audiences • Goals and Objectives • Potential Student Climate Research Areas • Anticipated Outcomes • Strategic Partners

  3. GLOBE’s Evolution since 1995 • From Protocols to Student Research • From Science and Education to Education and Science • From a few schools in a few countries to over 20,000 schools in 110 countries • From local classroom investigations to global student research campaigns

  4. GLOBE Assets • 109 International (Country) & 140 U.S. Partners • >40,000 teachers and 1.5 million students have already participated in GLOBE • Staff with expertise in professional development, curriculum development, science, data, partnership building, technology, grant writing • > 55 Scientific measurement protocols • Database of > 19 million student measurements • Teacher’s Guide and other materials • Four Earth System Science Project partners

  5. GLOBE Around the World GLOBE Regions (Countries) Africa (22) Asia-Pacific (17) Europe-Eurasia (40) Latin America-Caribbean (18) Near East (11) North America (2) 110 GLOBE Partner Countries 19 million environmental measurements have been reported to the GLOBE Database GLOBE has trained over 40,000 teachers representing more than 20,000 schools worldwide. Currently 109 Active GLOBE Countries • “GLOBE is the quintessentially ideal program for involving • kids in science.” Nobel Laureate Dr. Leon Lederman

  6. GLOBE Investigation Areas Atmosphere and Climate Hydrology Soil Land Cover Biology Phenology Over 19 Million measurements recorded on the GLOBE Web site for use in student research

  7. Why a Student Climate Science Research Campaign? • One of the most important issues we and our children will have to address • Growing public awareness about the issue, but lack of scientific understanding on which to base decisions • Many students don’t have the opportunity to learn about climate in the current K-16 curriculum

  8. Can Students Do Research? • Yes! • Example: Global Learning Expeditions • Research Needs to be: • Grade-level appropriate • Linked to school curriculum and learning goals • Fit within confines of school year

  9. Target Audiences • Primary Audiences • Secondary and College Students and Teachers • Grades 6-16 • Scientists • Climate, Environmental, Ecosystem, Polar, Ocean • Secondary Audiences • Administrators • General Public • Decision-makers

  10. Goals • Engage > 1 million K-16 students and teachers in climate science research by 2013 • Enhance Climate literacy and understanding for millions of people around the world • Empower students, teachers, and citizens to “take action” on climate and environmental issues affecting their communities. • Create a compelling model for integrating environmental research into K-16 classrooms

  11. Student Climate Research Campaign:Planning the Focus • Geneva Workshop, January 2009 • Participants: • WMO, scientists, GLOBE Partners, teachers • Goal: Identify Student Research Areas • Relevant and interesting to students • Align with & support school curriculum goals and learning outcomes • Of interest and relevance to scientific community

  12. Geneva Workshop Outcomes Potential Student Climate Research Areas: • Water-Weather and Climate • Oceans and Climate • Carbon Cycle, Energy, and Climate • Extreme Environments and Climate • Ecosystems, Biodiversity, and Climate • Human Health and Climate • Food, Agriculture, and Climate

  13. Climate Campaign:Planning the Focus 7 Research Areas Leveraging existing GLOBE materials leads to focus on areas of: Water-Weather and Climate Ecosystems, Biodiversity, and Climate Next step: Identified Topics with these 2 research areas and sought feedback from educators & scientists

  14. Survey Results • Limited Response from Scientists • Summary of Educator Input on Topics: Curriculum Interest toRelevanceStudents • Ecosystem / Climate #1 #1 • Water Quality & Availability 2 2 • Global Temperature 3 3 • Carbon & Energy Cycles 4 4 • Aerosols 5 5 • Ocean-Climate Connections 6 7 • Mosquito/Insects & Climate 7 6

  15. Planning the Climate Campaign: Phase 1: 2009-2010 • Determined via input from GLOBE community, Geneva Workshop, NASA Scientist partners, NSTA Survey, and others • Initial Campaign Areas: • Water, Weather, and Climate: “The Great Global Temperature Investigation” • Fall 2009; 1 month duration • Local air temperature measurements (max/min) • Compare to historical data • Online student collaboration via networking tool • Ecosystems, Biodiversity and Climate • Fall 2009 • In conjunction with GLOBE in Africa Kilimanjaro event

  16. Water-Weather-Climate • I.Foundational Learning Activities(Gateway to Research Extensions) • Weather vs. Climate • Weather Variables (temperature, pressure, precipitation, humidity) • Weather Basics (clouds, fronts, pressure systems) • Atmospheric Circulation patterns • Ocean-Atmosphere interactions • II. Research Extensions • Predicting and preparing for Droughts/Flood • Aerosols, Air Pollution, and Human Health

  17. The Great Global Temperature Investigation Students • Foundational Learning Activities • Data Collection & Exploration: • Tmax and Tmin collection • Explore historic data sets • Examine land vs sea surface Temp data • Research Extension • Explore prehistoric Temperature data (tree rings, corals, ice cores) to look at climate variation over long time periods Teachers • Professional Development: online courses, modules, and tutorials for teachers and partners Scientists • Mentoring schools with data collection • Providing guidance on data analysis • Potentially involve graduate students & post-docs

  18. GLOBE Student Research Collaboratory • Earth system science teaching and learning resources • Tutorials, modules, digital library resources, professional development opportunities, assessments • Data sets, tools and services • GIS, Mapping, Graphing, Modeling, Remote sensing • Online collaboration tools and services • School-school and Scientist-Teacher-Student • GLOBE Student Research Projects--- • online library/archive • Student Research---campaigns and events

  19. Anticipated Campaign Outcomes: Students • Improved scientific understanding of climate, weather, geochemical cycles, biomes, ecosystems, rates of change, and natural and human influences on climate • Enhanced skills: problem solving, systems thinking, decision-making, data analysis, collaboration, and communication skills • Greater interest in, and ability to do science • Greater awareness and appreciation of other countries and cultures • Increased interest in STEM careers

  20. Anticipated Outcomes: Teachers • Greater understanding of climate, weather, and related concepts • Enhanced ability to facilitate inquiry-based student research • Enhanced understanding and use of data in the classroom • Greater interest in participating in collaborative research investigations

  21. Anticipated Outcomes: Communities • Enhanced public climate literacy • Development of school and community “climate action” plans • Greater support for K-16 STEM education • Healthier, more climate conscious, and more energy efficient communities • Reduction in community carbon footprints

  22. Anticipated OutcomesScientists • Personal Satisfaction… helping students, teachers, the general public • Fulfillment of NSF  Criterion 2 (Broader Impacts) and NASA EO component • Greater knowledge, understanding, appreciation of K-16 STEM teaching and learning • Support for next generation of ES scientists

  23. Strategic Partners • The Worldwide GLOBE Community • UCAR-NCAR-UOP • NASA and other Federal Agencies (U.S.) • International Organizations • Professional Scientific and Educational Organizations • Corporations and Businesses • Foundations

  24. So what are we looking for from NASA? • Scientists doing research related to: • Water, weather, and climate • Ecosystems, biodiversity, and climate • Access to variety of data sets accessible to students and teachers • Connections to international scientists • Note: ROSES RPF… $15K supplements for EO

  25. Questions

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