NSF Awards: 1649367
2017 (see original presentation & discussion)
Undergraduate
EarthConnections is based in communities – linking students, educators, and community leaders together to address a local challenge that can be explored by the students using geoscience. By working with students from diverse backgrounds, the project team is developing a network of people and resources to prepare students to work in their communities addressing environmental hazards and resource issues directly impacting their local community. This project brings together partners who have led successful national efforts addressing components of these challenges with partners in three regions to create pathways in three regional pilots, focusing on key academic transitions in three diverse US communities—Atlanta, Georgia; San Bernardino, California; and Oklahoma—and will use these pathways as laboratories and catalysts for a systemic change in geoscience and geoscience education. These pathways will include multiple opportunities for students to 1) learn geoscience in the context of compelling local issues, 2) use geoscience to address local challenges, and 3) explore geoscience career pathways.
The EarthConnections collective impact alliance develops regionally focused, Earth education pathways that support and guide students from engagement in relevant, Earth-related science at an early age through the many steps and transitions to geoscience-related careers. EarthConnections advances the use of participatory approaches in the geosciences, nurturing a generation of future scientists who are well-versed in methods and strategies for community engagement. This approach has broad, local community impact and will increase the public’s value of and support for geoscience.
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
We’re aiming to develop scalable, national model for creating pathways for students from underrepresented groups to careers in geosciences. We are linking local educators and community organizers with national resources. Our pilot project is not quite a year old and not surprisingly we’re finding successes as well as challenges. After you view our video we’re interested in your thoughts on a lot, but to start:
1) What have you found the most effective ways to keep lines of continuous communication open with your project? Our project team is working with little dedicated resources and while we have quarterly telecoms and a team web workspace, it’s sometimes challenging to keep current.
2) Anyone else working on both national and regional/local scales? We'd love for you to share your strategies for organizing local projects. Each national project team member is working with a regional group and the distance sometimes makes organizing action challenging. Any examples of successful remote engagement?
Kristi Fink
Your efforts are OUTSTANDING and congruent with our smaller scale Organization's Mission. This is Kristi Fink, Executive Director for Texas Educational Seismic Project (Non Profit, Public Charity, www.txesp.org). I have (am) facing challenges initiating exciting engagements with public, private, primary and secondary schools. In Texas, it one large hurdle is convincing Principals and Superintendents that hands on, inquiry-based instructional methods enable students' learning potential beyond rote memorization. Students who inquire and investigate their world do learn the required concepts mandated by State and Federal Guidelines; however, implementing our Educational Seismic Project has proven difficult likely to (1) pressure on teachers' classroom performance, (2) lack of vision / Content Expertise, and most importantly (3) a foundation of trust that learning objectives will be not only be achieved, but far exceeded. we are very interested in collaborating with your Organization to help us connect more within Texas communities!
Lastly, we have successfully engaged with students in remote areas such as Seeley Lake, MT. We have brought STEM to the forefront by leveraging video teleconferences for Career Day discussions, TXESP curriculum activities' discussion, and connecting their school to other Professionals. The remote schools, in particular, suffer the most as they have limited community opportunities to observe, work, and connect with STEM Professionals beyond the "local" businesses.
We also leverage nation or state wide events for community outreach opportunities - aiding us by building name recognition and credibility of our Organization's dedication We have used "Connect2Texas" for video conferencing, but have also used Skpe when necessary, As part of the "March For Science" recent movement, women in STEM have connected with educators and now engage local Girl Scout troops learning about differing college and career pathways. Another example is searching for Event volunteer requests thru Professional Organizations, or Sponsoring Universities and Businesses. We will be presenting at STEM Texas in October as one example (organized in part by the University of Houston).
Donna Charlevoix
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Hi Kristi - wow! What fantastic work you are doing! It sounds like we have a lot of common goals and may be able to connect on several levels. Let' connect and discuss further (donnac -at- unavco.org). I love the teleconference Career Day! For our summer internship programs (community college aged students) we do brownbag carer lunches and they are the highlight of the program for students every year. We're trying to get more resources out there about careers in STEM (specifically geosciences) - you might be interested in our slowing growing video collection of Geoscience Career Spotlights.
I appreciate your challenge in getting the school administrators on board. Have you worked with or connected with Mike Odell (see below) from the Univ. Texas, Tyler? He's done a fantastic job of integrating PBL into multiple charter schools.
Our project is in the pilot phase and I'm anticipating once we are a bit further along we will encounter similar challenges and will be looking to groups like yours to help us work toward solutions.
Tami LaFleur
K-12 STEM Coordinator
Hi Donna-
I work in the K-12 public education field. Your project has me thinking that we do very little with specific areas of engineering. We are in the Northeast and not far from the coastline- We should be having students study the erosion factor that occurs continuously- or maybe renewable energy? Watching your video, I am wondering how you linked your organization to schools. How did you ensure that you were working with underrepresented groups? I appreciate the authentic nature of your work- an area of science that applies to anyone in any region of the world.
Michael Kolodziej
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Great questions! We are in the pilot phase right now and working in three regional pilot areas (Atlanta, Oklahoma, San Bernardino). In each of the three regions we are working to connect our university partners with both local educators and community activists. This has largely been done through personal, networked connections. In all three cases, we designed the community topic of investigation to be one either focused in a URM area or a topic that directly impacts URM groups. It's very much a work in progress. We've found that having a lot of conversations with community groups already working on these issues is helping to lay the foundation for engaging the students. Our focus is to bring "geoscience" to help address the issue challenging the community. Many of the groups are aware of the local issues but have not used science/geoscience to help frame the solution.
Tami LaFleur
K-12 STEM Coordinator
Good tip- Start "conversations with community groups already working on the issue." I am going to use this tip. I look forward to hearing the progress on the impact of your projects on these 3 communities. How often do you update progress?
Michael Kolodziej
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Hi Tami. We have quarterly check-ins as a team and update our internal pages. Your question prompts me to think about the frequency with which we update our externally facing pages. I think we should aim to do these updates quarterly as well.
Tami LaFleur
K-12 STEM Coordinator
:) I think people will be interested in your progress and advances.
Dale McCreedy
Vice President of Audience & Community Engagement
Donna - This looks like a great project. It sounds like you are doing really well for the first year! I love the diversity of site issues and populations. I am wondering what your mutually reinforcing activities are and if there are ways that they tie you all together? I hear a common agenda but not sure what other components are common across sites? I have been involved in multiple nationally projects and communication and building a community when not colocated is often hard. In many initiatives with similar challenges, there are monthly calls that include updates, but also conversations about challenges, new approaches, etc. While participants from the sites will, hopefully, eventually be able to take over, this is a great job for the backbone organization at the start - scheduling, structuring and insuring supportive and productive calls. I was intrigued to hear that geosciences lags behind most other sciences in terms of underrepresented audiences. What is your experiences so far with respect to gender? to students from rural backgrounds?
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Hi Dale! Thanks for your interest and questions. Your question about mutually reinforcing activities is a good one. We haven't identified those clearly yet, in part because the three regional alliances are at different stages of formation.
We anticipated that communication and community building were going to be challenging and we've certainly confirmed that! This being said, within the regional alliances (which include individuals co-located in the same city/area *and* at least one person from the national team) the communication as been relatively good. We need to better put in place mechanisms to share information between regional alliances and are headed in a good direction there.
Geosciences is not doing too bad with respect to gender. Geosciences is generally considered oceanography, atmospheric sciences, and geology. With respect to BS degrees conferred, in oceanography we've got parity, geology is close to parity, and atmospheric sciences lags pretty far behind. There is a retention challenge with females post-early career. I don't know that I've seen statistics for rural vs. urban.
Cindy Zhang
Hi Donna My name Cindy, I am an undergraduate with disability and studying geoscience I wonder what kind of job are there for people like myself.
Michael Kolodziej
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Hi Cindy! I'm so glad you wrote! There are a lot of opportunities, regardless of ability.
Are you familiar with the International Association for Geoscience Diversity (IAGD)? They have multiple resources that are worth exploring. http://www.theiagd.org/
A lot of the geosciences relies on scientific data. We need individuals to do a lot of computer based work with the data (QA/QC, archiving, processing, modeling). This of course does not require going out into the field. I'd encourage you to check out the job postings on the IAGD website.
IAGD also has a video here in the Video Hall. Look for "Designing accessible field-based learning in the Geosciences".
Michael Kolodziej
Dale McCreedy
Vice President of Audience & Community Engagement
Cindy - Be sure you check out the video by Christopher Atchison - the project is specifically designed to support and recruit people into the geosciences - and the related field work - who may have a variety of challenges that have historically been barriers to participation.
http://videohall.com/p/920
Michael Kolodziej
Donna Charlevoix
Michael Odell
Hi Donna, looks like a great program. Not sure if you remember, I oversee 3 Charter Schools and a Children's Museum. The Charter Schools are lab schools and are 100% PBL. Sounds like your initiative would be a great fit. How would we get involved? Here is the link to our school (click on the about tab). http://www.uttia.org/
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Hi Mike - thanks for the reminder. I do remember that now.
We are running three pilots right now and ultimately looking to scale up. I think there is a strong potential for synergy with your programs. Let me do a little more brainstorming and check in with others on the leadership team and I'll follow up offline with more detail.
Is Tyler classified as 'rural'?
Michael Kolodziej
Associate Vice President
All,
What a great project, and how wonderful that we have evolved beyond the memorization of science facts and into the practice of mentoring students to "use science to make a difference", which is a superior goal on many levels. It strikes me how much opportunity there is to integrate formal learning into real world research at the lower grade levels, and simultaneously the difficulty of organizing and facilitating the efforts. I wonder what role technology might play in helping to pair opportunities and needs in terms of students and research projects that matter in the local community? Can any parts of the matching be automated so that it doesn't put undue strain on the limited resources?
Thanks in advance for your reply.
Michael Odell
Tyler is not rural, BUT our Palestine Texas campus is rural.
Dale McCreedy
Vice President of Audience & Community Engagement
Mike - not sure if this will fit the bill but the National Girls Collaborative Project is an example of a use of a technology-based network that provides links between resources (a group of co-located girls interested in sTEM for example) and needs (I have a project I want to pilot). If not specifically what you are talking about, perhaps a model that you can go get funding to do :-)! https://ngcproject.org
Donna Charlevoix
Program Director
Dale - I agree, NGCP is a great organization! I served on the Colorado Leadership Board for the Colorado branch of NGCP and there is huge potential for partnering organizations. The biggest success was the professional development for leaders in various organizations. The Colorado Collaborative's challenge was getting groups to (1) register in the NGCP database and then (2) search for partners in the database. We found that there was reluctance to create yet another password and profile.
Michael Odell
Thanks for the tip. I will check it out.
Donna Charlevoix
Dale McCreedy
Vice President of Audience & Community Engagement
I look forward to following this project!
Donna Charlevoix
Further posting is closed as the event has ended.