
Whidbey Island-based Service, Education and Adventure (SEA) and Edmonds
Community College in Lynnwood have received a $100,000 Watershed
Education Grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA). The educators will work together with NOAA
scientists and local community organizations to provide hands-on, on
the water, workshops to Washington state teachers. The workshops will
be provided at no cost and include continuing education credits.
Watershed
education teaches the skills needed to protect and restore ocean and
coastal habitats, ensure clean coastal waters and beaches, and expand
scientific information, research, and monitoring.
The goal is to increase ocean literacy in Washington state and provide
skilled stewardship of local watersheds. An immediate need is to
prepare students for work helping to restore the environmental health
of Puget Sound by 2020. The Washington State Legislature set this goal
in 2007 and created a state agency, the Puget Sound Partnership, to
oversee it.
The marine workshops for teachers will be offered weekends aboard SEA
vessels — the 65-foot steel marine research vessel, “Indigo,” or the
74-foot sailing Ketch, “Luna”.
“In order for people to truly care about Puget Sound, our watersheds,
and the issues facing them, they must have real experiences on the
water and create meaningful relationships with the environment. We are
modeling this for participating teachers. We want them to feel and
experience the power of this educational approach,” said Susie
Richards, co-director of SEA.
Teachers may also take a for-credit online class, “Developing
Meaningful Watershed Education Programs,” through Heritage
Institute/Antioch University and will receive support from course
facilitators Susie Richards and Chris Burt (SEA co-directors) to
develop hands-on programs for their own students through this course.
Participating teachers will also have the opportunity to apply for
small grants to take their own students into the field to engage in
restoration and educational programs in their own local watersheds.
Students in Edmonds CC’s Learn and Serve Environmental Anthropology
Field (LEAF) School, a series of anthropology classes with a hands-on,
service-learning focus, will assist the teachers. The LEAF students
will share their experience as trained citizen scientists and will
serve as mentors to K-12 students to help monitor water quality, survey
habitats, take beach sediment profiles, monitor riparian restoration
projects, and track wildlife.
“College students who have experienced watershed-based service-learning
bring an enthusiasm for this hands-on approach that can inspire
teachers to engage younger students in learning activities that also
have a direct impact on improving the quality of life in our
communities,” said Thomas Murphy, Edmonds CC LEAF School instructor.
Upcoming marine workshops will be:
• Nov. 7-8 for Tacoma area school districts with Foss Waterway Seaport
• Nov. 14-15 for Suquamish HS/North Kitsap at Suquamish
• Dec. 5-6 for Seattle School Districts at Shilshoe
• March 20-21 for Port Townsend area teachers
• April 17-18 for Snohomish County teachers at Everett
• May 15-16 for South Snohomish County teachers at Edmonds
Workshops will be available through September 2010. For more
information or to participate, call Amy Johnson at Edmonds CC’s Center
for Service-Learning at 425.640.1882, email amy.johnson@edcc.edu or go
to www.serviceeducationadventure.org.
--###--
Edmonds Community College’s Learn and Serve Environmental Anthropology Field (LEAF) School
offers a series of three anthropology classes, Human Ecology 201, 202,
and 203, with a focus on hands-on service-learning activities in
partnership with local agencies. Students practice participant
observation, the primary method of investigation in cultural
anthropology, while learning about the social and ecosystems of Western
Washington.
http://www.edcc.edu/leaf
Service Education Adventure is a non-profit organization that
provides unique hands-on, experiential educational opportunities to
schools, universities, government agencies, and businesses on the
waters of Northwest Washington and is coordinated by Co-Directors Scott
Ashworth, Susie Richards, and Chris Burt.
http://www.serviceeducationadventure.org
Puget Sound Partnership was created by the Washington State
Legislature in 2007 (RCW 90.71.210) to oversee the restoration of the
environmental health of Puget Sound by 2020. The agency consists of a
leadership council, an executive director, an ecosystem coordination
board, and a Puget Sound science panel.
http://www.psp.wa.gov