| February
13, 2004 - Release:
04-09 EXTREME
CONDITIONS PROVIDE EXCELLENT ENVIRONMENT FOR HOW 2004 NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center is preparing to host NASA Explorer School (NES) teachers
for Winter Camp 2004 History of Winter (HOW) at Northwood School, Lake Placid,
New York, the week of Feb. 15 21. HOW is a science learning camp that will
allow teachers the opportunity to live among and work alongside snow and ice
scientists as they study the records in the snow and lake ice "I
have always been fascinated by ice and snow and I thought it would be a good way
to enable teachers to be better science teachers, essentially introducing them
to a teacher as scientist (TAS) role." said Peter Wasilewski, of the
Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md., and director of the History of Winter expedition. He along
with Dr. Roberts Gabrys, Goddard Education Officer, created HOW in 2001. According
to Wasilewski, the goal of HOW this year, is to provide Explorer School teachers
with a better understanding about how "as only NASA can," relates to
ice on Earth and beyond. "Teachers will be active participants as they
learn from hands on experience and then translate what they have learned into
a teacher enhancement framework that they would take back to their schools,"
says Wasilewski. "Ultimately their work will be the resource for the
resultant classroom enrichment products." Twenty-one
teachers from twelve states are participating, some coming from as far away
as Oregon and Florida and including the mid-Atlantic region. "The teachers
have to sleep in the tents for the entire five days to gain the total experience,
but this is optional" said Wasilewski. "We also have the studies
from previous years and will be using the same techniques as before. We will
be comparing our measurements with those taken in the last three years."
The
teacher teams will investigate ice crystal patterns from Lake Placid, Cascade
Lake and the Icefall at the Cascade Lake site. They will learn about the study
of solar system ice, tools to be used, cold weather camping and lots more.
"In years past the experience has proven to be very effective and a great
team building experience," said Wasilewski. Tony
Gow from the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab with over 40
years of Arctic and Antarctic experience will be the scientific leader. Wasilewski
will lead a team of experts to create an on-site and follow-on science structure.
Technical experts will videotape, video stream and archive the events and
the hands-on science details. After
the snow and ice studies are complete, teachers will use their history of winter
experience to develop an innovative science curriculum that meets National
Science Education Standards. Lake
Placid, host of the 1932 and 1980 Winter Olympics, is considered an ideal location
for non-polar snow-ice-cold investigations because of the extreme temperature
and yearly snowfall totals. For
more information about HOW check out the website at: http://www.historyofwinter.org Go
to http://howexcite.gsfc.nasa.gov
for exciting visual records of the HOW2004 experience.
|