Dear Lake and Park Community
I wanted to inform our school community of a recent
accomplishment on Eileen Hynes' part. She is one of fourteen teachers to
be recognized nationally as a Grosvenor 2012 Teacher Fellow. This particular
award will allow her to experience the arctic firsthand. She will travel Svalbard, Norway this summer with one other teacher and will be
returning to us in the fall with much to share. We are privileged
to have Eileen working with us with her enthusiastic embracing of teaching and
lifelong learning. Please join us in congratulating her.
Camille
Below is the National Press Release from National Geographic.
Below is the National Press Release from National Geographic.
CONTACT: Kelsey Flora
National Geographic Society
LINDBLAD EXPEDITIONS AND NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EDUCATION PROGRAMS
ANNOUNCE 2012 GROSVENOR TEACHER FELLOWS
Program Supported by Oracle and Google Sends 14 Educators to Explore
Arctic Svalbard as
Outdoor Classroom for Professional Development
Outdoor Classroom for Professional Development
WASHINGTON (April
25, 2012)—Fourteen respected educators have been selected as this year’s
National Geographic Grosvenor Teacher Fellows. The fellowships are awarded to
teachers who best demonstrate excellence in geography education. This is the
sixth year of the Fellows program, established to honor former National
Geographic Society Chairman Gilbert M. Grosvenor’s lifetime commitment to
geographic education.
Funding for the
fellowships was donated in perpetuity to the National Geographic Society by
Sven-Olof Lindblad and Lindblad Expeditions to mark Grosvenor’s 75th birthday
in 2006 and to honor his service in enhancing and improving geographic
education across the United States. Additional support for the program is
provided by Oracle and Google.
Each year, K-12
educators from around the country are encouraged to apply for this
one-of-a-kind professional development opportunity. The object is to enhance
their geographic learning through direct experience and to bring that knowledge
back to their classrooms. The 2012 Fellows, who will be embarking this summer
on a Lindblad Expeditions voyage to Arctic Svalbard, are:
- Doug Andersen, a 9th-grade world
geography and human geography teacher at Oak Canyon Junior High School in
Lindon, Utah, whose students learn hands-on how to use geospatial technologies
to answer questions about their environment. Andersen is co-coordinator of the
Utah Geographic Alliance.
- Coleman Eaton III, a physics, biology and
chemistry teacher at Lovejoy High School in Hampton, Ga., who plans to create a
marine science class and a marine science club at his school to connect
students to water sources and help them understand their impacts on water both locally
and worldwide.
- Harmony Hendrick, a 4th-grade
teacher at William H. Natcher Elementary School in Bowling Green, Ky., a
seven-year member of the Kentucky Geographic Alliance and co-coordinator of
Geography Awareness Week in Kentucky.
- Katie Hoekzema, a 10-year teaching veteran and 9th-grade
physical science and biology teacher at Milford High School in Milford, Ohio,
who uses classroom projects to help inspire students to get outside and explore
the world.
(MORE)
GROSVENOR TEACHER
FELLOWS (PAGE 2)
- Kim Houtz, a biology, anatomy, physiology and
forensic science teacher at Marysville High School in Marysville, Kan., who has
helped develop science curriculum with Duke University, National Institutes of
Health and BSCS.
- Eileen Hynes is an elementary school social
studies, language arts, science, math, art and outdoor experience teacher at
The Lake and Park School in Seattle. Using her Pacific Northwest location as a
backdrop for geography education, she takes her students on a field trip to map
the salmon’s return to the Seattle area every fall.
- Julia Koble, a 10th-grade biology
teacher at Minot High School in Minot, N.D., who strives to make science
relevant for her students. A former North Dakota Teacher of the Year, Koble
used recent record-breaking flooding in Minot to demonstrate the importance of
protecting our oceans and water sources.
- Jared Larson, a biology teacher at McMinnville
High School in McMinnville, Ore., who has created full-day ecology and water
field units for elementary school students and designs field trips in support
of McMinnville Education Foundation’s goals for science enrichment activities.
- JoAnn Moore, a biology teacher at Gig Harbor
High School in Gig Harbor, Wash., who has developed field-based high school
courses that focus on stream and forest ecology as well as marine biology. She
also spends her summers teaching field-based continuing education courses for
teachers and running a middle school marine science camp.
- Julie Ryan, a biology teacher at Haddon Heights
High School in Haddon Heights, N.J., who helped re-establish the New Jersey
Geographic Education Alliance.
- Emily Sherman, a life science and environmental
science teacher at Scarborough High School in Scarborough, Maine, who works
with the Schoodic Education and Research Center of Acadia National Park to
involve her students in research on mercury contamination. She recently
received a Noyce Master Teacher Fellowship for bringing biology case studies
into the classroom.
- Michael Sustin, an environmental chemistry and
environmental science teacher at West Geauga High School in Chesterland, Ohio,
who is a member of the Environmental Education Council of Ohio and the North
American Association for Environmental Education and has developed a Summer
Ecology Expedition program for his students.
- Mike Trimble, a biological and environmental
sciences teacher at Corona del Sol High School in Tempe, Ariz., who emphasizes
hands-on learning, taking students on research expeditions and offering
wilderness survival training.
- David Wood, an 8th-grade
environmental science teacher at Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C.,
who encourages his students to develop a personal set of environmental ethics
and uses his school’s LEED platinum-rated campus to illustrate green living
standards.
(MORE)
GROSVENOR TEACHER FELLOWS (PAGE 3)
The Fellows will
travel this summer on an in-depth exploration of Arctic Svalbard, within 600
miles of the North Pole, aboard the Lindblad Expeditions ship National
Geographic Explorer. They will experience a landscape and wildlife that can
only be seen in the Arctic, including the midnight sun and formidable glaciers
as well as polar bears, walruses and whales seen nowhere else on Earth. Led by
an expert Lindblad-National Geographic team, the Fellows will gain a wealth of
knowledge to develop activities for their classrooms and to share with
professional colleagues. Prior to the expedition, the 2012 Grosvenor Teacher
Fellows will travel to Washington, D.C., to participate in a workshop.
“This program
recognizes exemplary educators for their commitment to improving geographic
literacy and inspiring tomorrow’s leaders to be responsible caretakers of our
planet,” said Sven-Olof Lindblad, founder of Lindblad Expeditions. “We are
delighted that these outstanding educators, who are so strongly committed to
hands-on geographic education, will journey to Arctic Svalbard with us.”
“The partnership
with Lindblad Expeditions and National Geographic is an ideal fit of our two
missions,” said John Fahey, chairman of the National Geographic Society and the
National Geographic Education Foundation. “We believe in the value of
educational travel, and Lindblad’s programs are the best. Fellows will have
experiences they will never forget, which will surely prepare them to continue
inspiring generations of young people.”
To learn more about
this opportunity and to watch video of Grosvenor Teacher Fellows from previous
years, visit http://www.expeditions.com/teachers. To become
more involved in geography education, contact your State Geographic Alliance
at http://www.ngsednet.org/community/about.cfm?community_id=94.
Lindblad Expeditions and National
Geographic
Lindblad
Expeditions and National Geographic have joined in a mission-driven alliance to
inspire people to explore and care about the planet. As pioneers of global
exploration, the organizations work in tandem to produce innovative marine
expedition programs and to promote conservation and sustainable tourism around
the world, as well as to improve geographic education and geo-literacy.
The partnership’s educationally oriented voyages allow guests to interact with
leading scientists, naturalists and researchers while discovering stunning
natural environments, above and below the sea, through state-of-the-art
exploration tools. A joint philanthropic fund that supports science and
conservation groups enables better understanding of the world’s remaining
special places and fosters the dissemination of geographic knowledge around the
globe. Lindblad Expeditions and National Geographic Education have also
partnered to create the Grosvenor Teacher Fellow program, a field-based
professional development opportunity that recognizes educators for their
commitment to geography education.
NOTE: Interviews with this year’s Grosvenor Teacher Fellows and photos are
available. Arctic b-roll packages will be available following the teachers’
voyages.
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