SDSU
Developing First Post-Wildfire Science Curriculum
Materials to Be Offered Free to Elementary
and Middle Schools This Fall
CONTACT: Jason Foster, foster@mail.sdsu.edu
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Office (619) 594-2585, Mobile (619) 992-0772
Stephen F. Barnes, Ph.D., sbarnes@mail.sdsu.edu
Adjunct Professor of Education
SDSU Department of Administration, Rehabilitation, Postsecondary
Education
Office (619) 594-8806
SAN DIEGO, Monday, May 2,
2005 This fall, tens of thousands of elementary and middle
school students around San Diego County will have the opportunity
to learn environmental lessons from the 2003 firestorms through
the nations first comprehensive post-wildfire science curriculum,
now under development at San Diego State University.
The program, called the San Diego Wildfires Education
Project, is being created by educators and scientists at SDSUs
College of Education and partners at the San Diego County Office
of Education, San Diego County Water Authority, San Diego Natural
History Museum, San Diego Science Alliance and other local government
and environmental education groups.
The curriculum will be given to county elementary
and middle schools at no cost. Project leaders say these materials
help fill a gaping hole in the regions healing process from
the tragic conflagrations, which charred 376,000 acres, destroyed
2,400 homes and killed 16 people in October 2003.
We need a region-wide educational component
to our recovery that focuses on understanding the wildfire process,
including origins, frequency and environmental recovery, said
Stephen F. Barnes, Ph.D., adjunct professor of education at SDSU
and director of the San Diego Wildfires Education Project. This
program will help children get past the scary nature of fires to
realize that fires are a regular part of the urban/wildland interface,
how important it is to study water and air pollution and other impacts
from fires and how the recovery of habitats and species occurs after
fires.
A primary focus of this project is to motivate
students and teachers from the most fire-affected areas to understand
and participate in monitoring and analyzing the environmental recovery
process. Barnes said there are about 16,000 children and 950 teachers
in grades K-8 who will be specifically targeted for this part of
the program. However, the curriculum is being designed for use by
all elementary and middle schools throughout the county 400
elementary schools, 85 middle schools and approximately 280,000
students and their teachers. Younger children will learn through
traditional and in-school interactive methods. Older children will
learn through virtual encounters with San Diegos habitats
and actual science data collection methods.
Ideally we want to prepare teachers and their
students to go into the field, observe and collect data in ways
that provide meaningful, memorable lessens for them and also help
these young scientists analyze whats actually going on in
post-burn areas, Barnes said.
Teachers and students throughout the county will
have access to a wide range of classroom-oriented, post-fire learning
tools and materials, including science projects, downloadable Web
files and DVDs featuring virtual tours of burn areas and video interviews
with environmental experts.
Project staff are adapting environmental science,
fire ecology and local field studies to create the post-fire science
curriculum, emphasizing source and runoff pollution, watershed and
habitat restoration and species recovery in San Diegos chaparral,
backcountry, and forested areas. The curriculum will be compliant
with statewide science standards for elementary and middle schools.
Project staff expect materials to be completed and available by
mid-August.
Fire ecology is a subject that affects us all each year, but
is seldom discussed beyond the immediate crises, said Ivan
Golakoff, Education Programs Supervisor for the San Diego County
Water Authority and co-director of the San Diego Wildfires Education
Project. This curriculum will help make science relevant for
students by allowing them to study the ecology and science of fire
in their own back yards. It will also provide students the opportunity
to become involved in the fire recovery process, which hopefully
will make them better stewards of the environment.
The project has received preliminary funding from
the San Diego Foundation and the Hans and Margaret Doe Charitable
Trust.
More information about the San Diego Wildfires Education Project
is available at www.SanDiegoWildfires.org. Once completed, many
of the curriculum materials will be accessible for downloading from
the Web site.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelors
degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 16 areas. SDSUs nearly 33,000 students participate in an
academic curriculum distinguished by direct contact with faculty
and an increasing international emphasis that prepares them for
a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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