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THOUSANDS OF U.S. STUDENTS TO ASSIST WORLD SCIENTISTS
Release Date: 2/1/1995
Contact Information: Ann Hardison, (202) 395-7600
(Washington, D.C.)--Through a unique public-private
partnership, thousands of U.S. students are forming an
international network using state-of-the-art technology to take
environmental measurements and share their observations with
other students and scientists around the world.
The Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the
Environment Program (GLOBE) -- funded and administered jointly by
six federal agencies -- announced today the selection of over
1,500 U.S. elementary and secondary schools that will initiate
the hands-on, school-based science education program.
GLOBE students will contribute to a better understanding of
the planet by making regular environmental observations at
thousands of locations around the world and sharing their
information via the Internet. Attached is a list of the schools
in your area selected to participate in GLOBE this year. A list
of the U.S. schools selected is also available on the World Wide
Web at www.globe.gov.
"GLOBE builds excitement about science and math among our
young people and helps all of us to better understand our global
environment," Vice President Al Gore said. The Vice President
announced the GLOBE program during the 1994 Earth Day
celebration. "The thousands of letters we have received from
students and teachers about GLOBE are strong indications of the
need and desire for hands-on science education programs in our
schools."
GLOBE funding and program administration is jointly provided
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National
Science Foundation, the Environmental Protection Agency, the
State Department, and the U.S. Department of Education. In
response to growing private sector expressions of support, GLOBE
is seeking proposals from non-profit environmental education
entities to raise private funds to support the GLOBE program in
future years.
At their schools, students will routinely take measurements
of selected features of the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and
biosphere. Using IBM-compatible or Apple Macintosh computers,
students will send their data on the Internet to a GLOBE
processing facility in Boulder, Colorado and receive back
environmental images vividly depicting their observations and
that of all other GLOBE schools around the world. GLOBE
educational materials will guide students in understanding their
observations.
"GLOBE is a superb infrastructure on which to link existing
environmental education projects, and with which to create
science education methods that bring students enthusiastically
into the 21st century," stated President of the National Science
Teachers Association Marvin Druger. "GLOBE will let kids get
their hands into real world science, exploring the way their
earth's systems work GLOBE is an excellent vehicle to put the new
National Science Education Standards into practice."
All GLOBE schools will receive teacher training,
educational materials, and state-of-the-art graphic images of
GLOBE data. About 800 of the schools registering to participate
in GLOBE did not seek any additional Federal assistance. The
remainder of the U.S. schools participating this year
successfully competed for Federal assistance in the form of
computers, Internet access, teacher training travel costs, and
scientific instruments. Assistance was awarded on a competitive
basis based on school need and commitment to the goals of GLOBE.
A distinguished group of international scientists selected
the set of GLOBE measurements based on the contributions the
student data will make to improving the scientific understanding
of the planet. Four Nobel Prize-winning scientists have issued a
joint statement of support for the objectives of the GLOBE
program.
Training for teachers in measurement procedures, data
reporting, and the use of GLOBE graphical images as instructional
materials will begin this March. Students will begin officially
reporting their GLOBE data on April 22, 1995, in recognition of
the 25th Anniversary of Earth Day.
Over 100 countries have expressed interest in having
students participate in GLOBE. The United Nations General
Assembly adopted a resolution supporting GLOBE. Last December,
Russia became the first formal GLOBE international partner.
International GLOBE participants are responsible for acquiring
the resources necessary to equip their schools and conduct the
activities of the GLOBE program.
Schools selected in Southern California are:
School City Principal
Baldwin Stocker School Arcadia Nancy Hogg
Dana Middle School Arcadia Joseph A. Fox
Round Valley Joint ESD Bishop Linda Keating
Gateway Community School Camarillo Phillip Gore
Chula Vista Junior High Chula Vista Larry Perondi
Clear View Elementary Chula Vista Ginger Hovenic
Mary Buren Elementary Guadaline Jose Nichols
Hesperia Jr. High School Hesperia Ralph Dudley
Joshua Circle School Hesperia Mark McKinney
Lime Street Elementary Hesperia Gil Gebo
Imperial Beach Elementary Imperial Beach Ronald Bechtel
Mar Vista High School Imperial Beach Gloria Samson
Owens Valley High School Independence Joel Hampton
La Puente High School La Puente Phyllis Wiersma
F. D. Roosevelt School Lawndale Dorinda Dee
Rossmoor Elementary School Los Alamitos Laurel Telfer
K.E.E.P. Ocean Outdoor School Los Osos Rick Hewett
Lost Hills Elementary Lost Hills David W. Day
A.F.U.E.L. Acad. at Lynwood HS Lynwood Shirley Lidell
Harvard-Westlake School No. Hollywood Thomas Hudnut
Mountain Shadows Middle School Nuevo Vincent Ponce
Olancha Elementary School Olancha Diana Jones
Creek View School Ontario Rand Shumway
Grace Yokley Middle School Ontario Bruce Perry
Mountain View School Ontario Terry Weatherby
The Ontario Center School Ontario Gary Temkin
Charles Blackstock School Oxnard Robin Freeman
E.O. Green Oxnard Deloris Carn
Garden Road Elementary Poway Kathy Cleveland
Midland Elementary Poway Abby Gray
Edward M. Fitzgerald Elementary Rialto Robbin Valles
Helen Dollahan Elementary Rialto Jerry Rucker
Kolb Middle School Rialto Tom Cultile
Kucera Middle School Rialto Mitch Hovey
Palos Verdes Peninsula H.S. Roll. Hills Est. Kelly Johnson
Emory Elementary San Diego Helen Steel
Park Village Elementary School San Diego Jack Troxell
Lillian Larsen Elementary San Miguel Robert McLaughlin
Crossroads School Santa Monica Ann Colburn
Harbor Math/Science Gifted Magnet San Pedro C. Hoyard-Walker
Sea View/West Shores High School Salton Joe Ladd
South Pasadena High School South Pasadena Ben Ramirez
South Pasadena Middle School South Pasadena Marsha Aquirre
Katherine Edwards Int. School Whittier Monica Sena
Orange Grove Elementary Whittier Jeanette Kelly
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