{"id":1509,"date":"2011-09-01T09:54:00","date_gmt":"2011-09-01T13:54:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/?page_id=1509"},"modified":"2024-10-09T13:44:25","modified_gmt":"2024-10-09T17:44:25","slug":"advancing-environmental-literacy-informal-educators-add-new-technology-to-teaching-toolboxes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/advancing-environmental-literacy-informal-educators-add-new-technology-to-teaching-toolboxes\/","title":{"rendered":"Advancing Environmental Literacy: Informal Educators Add New Technology to Teaching Toolboxes"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\n\n\n\n
“If you ever want to see a bunch of grown people turn back into the wondrous, excited children they must have been, just put them in a pair of waders and let them interact with belugas and excellent trainers.” \u2014 Elizabeth Baird, education director, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Marine Mammal Institute blog<\/p>\n\n\n\n
The beluga, a social, circumpolar whale called the “canary of the sea” because of its varied vocalizations, often amazes humans, as do fur seals, dolphins and other marine mammals.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Two groups of North Carolina informal educators experienced that excitement firsthand through 10 days of training \u2014 one group in 2010, one in 2011 \u2014 with the Marine Mammal Institute, participating in face-to-face encounters with belugas and other marine mammals at Atlantic seaboard museums and aquariums.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
“I hope the enthusiasm we all feel for this topic will be translated to the families and students that attend our events,” Terri Kirby Hathaway, North Carolina Sea Grant’s marine education specialist, says.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
The informal educators’ odyssey of aqueous professional development included a dolphin necropsy observation, and open-ocean dolphin and humpback whale-spotting research. They also learned about new educational technology, including the GeoDome, a freestanding, inflatable audience-immersive video theater, 25 feet in diameter and about 15 feet high.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Through the N.C. Aquarium Society, Baird and Peggy Sloan, N.C. Aquarium at Fort Fisher’s director, landed the MMI grant, which included two GeoDomes, designed and built by The Elumenati of Asheville. When not on tour, one dome is at the museum in Raleigh, one at the Fort Fisher aquarium.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Hundreds of educators and students statewide are participating in GeoDome-based events, thanks to funding from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Environmental Literacy Grant Program.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
The informal educators \u2014 who share information in learning environments such as aquariums, museums and zoos, as well as nature and science centers \u2014 describe their marine mammal experiences and explain how such animals are faring during our era of climate change.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
They also share materials they created or adapted to develop climate and ocean literacy with other informal educators. The lessons complement the GeoDome video presentation. Each MMI educator is required to plan, host and conduct a marine mammal event in the year following their training.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Case in point: The Museum of the Albemarle’s “Summer Fun: Day at the Beach” program, where youngsters happily follow a paper-beluga-bedecked string trail on the museum floor to rooms filled with sea treasures.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Kirby Hathaway piggybacked her marine mammal program on this already-scheduled event in Elizabeth City, creating learning stations for all ages. Some of the materials were picked up during last year’s MMI training.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Sara Jean Hallos, N.C. Coastal Federation’s coastal outreach specialist and one of this year’s trainees, introduces visitors to marine mammal “biofacts.” The word was coined in 1993 to refer to preserved items such as animal bones, skins, molts and eggs. The visitors, young and old, see and touch a whale’s preserved eyeball, basting-brush-like baleen, a humpback whale’s skeletal phalange (finger bone) and huge hipbone. They also see dolphin parts, including jawbones, backbone and ribs, a sealskin and more.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
And on the spacious, breezy portico overlooking the Pasquotank River, museum junior docents, supervised by Charlotte Patterson, the MOA’s education coordinator, help make kites, sand-filigreed picture frames decorated with tiny seashells, toy wooden sailboats, porpoise headbands and sand drums.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
At the end of the paper-beluga trail, Kirby Hathaway, with museum staff and volunteers, has laden four tables with activities related to marine mammals. Here, visitors discover how whales and walruses keep warm in chilly waters and what marine mammals might eat.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
To learn about insulation, visitors insert one hand into a small plastic bag inside another that contains solid cooking shortening, which shares blubber’s thermal properties. Immersing the protected hand and the bare hand into a tub of ice water, the students note which chills more quickly. Hint: It’s the one that’s not insulated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n