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Alaska Trip Helps High School Students Learn About Climate Change

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A dozen days spent in national parks in Alaska this summer helped high school students from Ohio learn a little bit more about climate change up close. Their experience was part of the first “Climate Change Academy,” an immersive, comprehensive climate change course offered through the National Park Service.

"I am glad that I came to Alaska and learned about the harmful effects of climate change for myself,” said Sydney Young, a sophomore at West Geauga High School in Chesterland, Ohio. “I have the knowledge to define my own opinion. I feel comfortable and confident in my ability to make a change."

The Academy is a partnership between the National Park Service Climate Change Response Program and the non-profit No Barriers Youth.

“This is a model for experiential learning,” said Ray Sauvajot, acting associate director for natural resource stewardship and science in the National Park Service. The partnership began with the successful Night Skies program, which led to the development of the more intensive immersion program. No Barriers Youth solicited applications for the “Climate Change Academy” from middle and high schools across the nation. After several rounds of review, Mike Sustin, a chemistry and environmental science teacher from West Geauga High School, was selected as a group leader, and 10 students were selected to participate in the academy.

Sydney and her fellow students, ages 14 to 18, spent time in Kenai Fjords and Denali national parks following a pre-trip curriculum. The students dedicated time over weekends and summer days to complete the five sessions of extra-curricular lessons in preparation for the trip.

In Alaska, the group hiked the Harding Icefield Trail in Kenai Fjords National Park with park rangers Luke Rosier and Jenna Giddens. They were sworn in as Junior Rangers and took a full-day wildlife and glacier boat tour of the fjords with John Morris, interpretive program manager for the National Park Service’s Alaska Region.

Ricky Greene, a high school senior on the trip, said, “Every animal we saw on the cruise to Holgate Glacier became a story with a ton of interesting facts. The most amazing thing John told us was the idea of 'The Dancing Spheres' that described the relationships between the atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, cryosphere, biosphere and even the heliosphere. It gave me a whole new way to look at the way global warming affects us. Now I can explain it better to people who don't understand.”

In Denali National Park, students participated in a climate change scenario planning activity with Alaska Region Science Advisor Bob Winfree. On their last day in the park the group overcame personal challenges by hiking a strenuous Cathedral Mountain route with Dave Schirokauer, physical and social science program manager in Denali.

Now back in Ohio, the students are developing a project to share their discoveries with their community. Additionally, each student will enter the first No Barriers Youth Climate Change Art Contest, also sponsored by the NPS Climate Change Response Program, in which anyone ages 12-21 can submit an artistic entry responding to: “When thinking about climate change, what is your hope for the future?” The aim of the contest is to inspire conversation around the subject and to encourage youth to approach it from multiple disciplines and value the intersection of arts and sciences.

The National Park Service and No Barriers Youth work together to promote awareness and action on climate change. The National Park Service Climate Change Response Program and No Barriers Youth partnership is a commitment to provide climate change learning opportunities for youth and educators nationwide.

 

 

Comments

Back on ignore. Useless.


So now we're down to debating whether or not mankind is an accelerant.

That has always been the debate - whether he contributes (is an accelerant) and if so, by how much.  Glad to see you are finally catching up.

ExxonMobil has contributed over $16,000 since 1999.

Wow!  That's $1,000 a year.  That's less than what you and your wife have received from ExxonMobil (and other oil companies) over the same period. 

The Koch's bought and paid for Senator Inhofe

I wonder why their money was so much more powerful that that of Steyer, Bloomberg, Robertson, Soros, the SEIU and labor unions?  I see, like Obama, you are in denial.  You can't admit the elections were a repudiation of the policies of the last 6 years and need to find some other lame excuse. 

must have been a marvelous experience for these kids to travel to Alaska and see these marvelous sights.

On that I agree.


Even bigger wow.  I just went back and calculated the number.  Since 1999 (including this years pending distribution) Rick and his wife have received over $23,400 EACH, from oil development in Alaska.  I wonder how much of that they sent back.  That's nearly 3x what Inhofe got from ExxonMobil. I guess Rick and his wife must be in Exxon's pocket. 


C'mon, EC, that's a benefit of living in Alaska, not an attempt to curry favor with Rick and his wife....


Kurt - I've received two PFDs. I moved here in February and had to wait 23 months to qualify. I'm in my fourth year living here. And the dividend goes to all in the state who qualify regardless of politics. And, of course, this entire ad hominem diversion is pure red herring from the bought and paid for Inhofe.


Kurt - You think Exxon is currying favor with contributions of $1,000 per year?  Are they curryng favor with the $46 million they gave last year to precollege education?  The $4 million to Arts and Culture?  The $48 million to higher education.  The $69 million to civic and community groups?

My point with the PFDs was that $1,000  is nothing in the scheme of politics or political donations.  The wave of victories including Inholf's had nothing to do with money - expect perhaps the money coming out of the voters pockets. 


Lee - you need to look up the definition of a troll.  It is not "someone that disagrees with you, points out your unsubstantiated claims and is willing to discuss the issue".


Looks like people are still being suckered into trying to reason with trolls.  What a waste.  Even without reading them, I'm sure most of us could pretty well recite from memory the gibberish they contain.

Try the IGNORE button.  It certainly makes life a lot more peaceful and allows one to concentrate on the posts that have some value behind them.

Trouble is, the more people respond to trolling, the fewer and farther between those posts become.

IGNORE the trolls and those who try to convince us they are self-proclaimed experts on EVERYTHING or those who continually toot tunes with only one note, and they just might dry up and blow away as the climate warms.


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