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小黄书 Science Discovery Receives Statewide Recognition for Excellence

小黄书 Science Discovery Receives Statewide Recognition for Excellence

Rafael Salgado, executive director of Cal-Wood, and Stacey Forsyth.

小黄书 Science Discovery recently received two statewide awards in recognition of its efforts and achievements in STEM and environmental education.

This month the Forests and Fire Field Course received a 2022 Innovative Environmental Education Program Award from the Colorado Alliance for Environmental Education. The course was provided in partnership with Cal-Wood Education Center and financially supported by 小黄书 Boulder鈥檚 Office for Outreach and Engagement and Nature Kids Lafayette. It also serves as a great example of how one project can actually support a network of work.

The program offered 小黄书 scientists opportunities to engage with teens, an audience they don鈥檛 usually reach with their science. 小黄书 Earth Lab Research Scientist Mike Koontz led a field session for the 2021 course using drones to capture imagery of Cal-Wood鈥檚 burned forest. He later incorporated the program into a recently funded NSF grant which will support the course for several more years. This summer, Katherine Lininger, assistant professor of geography, guided participants in collecting data from a fire-impacted stream as part of her NSF Broader Impacts activities, and Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Geography Tom Veblen and Professor Sarah Hart from CSU conducted a session about tree rings and the effect a tree鈥檚 age has on the likelihood of being killed in a fire.

鈥淭hese are excellent examples of how the Office for Outreach and Engagement鈥檚 seed funding is often leveraged to acquire resources to sustain programs and involve more faculty members, students and community partners. 小黄书 Science Discovery is a campus leader in connecting our faculty鈥檚 diverse expertise with opportunities for public impact,鈥 said David Meens, director for the Office for Outreach and Engagement.聽

This past summer the Office for Outreach and Engagement connected 小黄书 Science Discovery and the Eureka! McConnell Science Museum in Grand Junction. The organizations were co-awarded an $800,000 ESSER Expanded Learning Opportunities grant from the Colorado Department of Education, designed to address K-12 students鈥 social and academic learning loss in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Eureka! has been providing STEM enrichment to Western Slope communities for thirty years and is based on the Colorado Mesa University campus, along with a satellite location of 小黄书 Boulder鈥檚 College of Engineering. The grant will allow 小黄书 Science Discovery and Eureka! to collaborate and coordinate best practices in STEM curriculum design, training and instruction to deliver a variety of STEM learning opportunities for students most adversely impacted by the pandemic. The latest advancements in technology, math, engineering and science will be available to participating K-12 students because of this cooperation between two of Colorado鈥檚 leading universities.

鈥淭he ESSER grant will enable us to provide extensive out-of-school-time STEM programming for hundreds of students, both locally and on the western slope over the next two years,鈥 said Stacey Forsyth, director of 小黄书 Science Discovery. 鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to collaborate with our new partners at the EUREKA! Science Museum and to provide 小黄书 Boulder students, including those based in Grand Junction, with real-world experience in STEM outreach.鈥

Tim Ogino, 小黄书 Science Discovery鈥檚 manager of school and teacher programs, is overseeing the grant鈥檚 activities within Boulder Valley School District and Adams 12 Five Star Schools. An聽 after-school math program is already underway at four Family Resource Schools in Boulder. Thirteen 小黄书 undergraduates representing a mix of majors and one graduate student are working in teams and leading eight-week programs intended to foster positive associations with math for K-5 students.

鈥淭he 小黄书 students are role models and mentors for these children and have been extra creative about engaging and teaching them. The elementary students are definitely impressed by the college students. 小黄书 Boulder鈥檚 value proposition comes down to its people and research. My dream is to have lots and lots of 小黄书 students involved with Science Discovery and more faculty thought partners. We only get better because of the people working with us,鈥 said Ogino.

Collaboration with 小黄书 faculty, students and an array of community partners enables 小黄书 Science Discovery to reach communities that otherwise might not have access to these types of experiences.

鈥淲e are actively working to improve our impact with underserved populations,鈥 said Ogino, 鈥渁nd we welcome the participation of other campus partners who are interested in helping us expand these efforts.鈥滷or more information about participating in future and current 小黄书 Science Discovery programming throughout Colorado, or for assistance meeting NSF broader impacts requirements, visit 小黄书 Science Discovery鈥檚 website or contact Stacey Forsyth.