Teachers in the desert: Creating ecological reserech opportunities for teachres and students on the US Mexico border

TitleTeachers in the desert: Creating ecological reserech opportunities for teachres and students on the US Mexico border
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsBestelmeyer BT, Somerday R.
Conference Name93rd Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting
Date PublishedAugust 3-8, 2008
Conference LocationMilwaukee, WI
ARIS Log Number230473
KeywordsAsombro, student, teacher
AbstractConsiderable research provides evidence for the value of teaching science using enhanced context strategies. These strategies include making learning relevant to students by using real-world examples and problems as well as taking students out of the classroom to learn about the topic. Unfortunately, these best practices are seldom used in the border region of southern New Mexico and west Texas due to a lack of funding, few teachers trained in inquiry-based science practices, and a lack of locally relevant curriculum. Ecological science here is often taught only from a textbook, a method that fails to demonstrate the excitement inherent in inquiry-based ecological science research. As part of the Teaching Ecological Complexity project funded by NSF, the Asombro Institute for Science Education and the Jornada Basin Long-Term Ecological Research Program conducted a two-week teacher professional development workshop in July 2008. High school teachers were immersed in their own ecological research projects, and they presented their hypotheses and results with the use of qualitative conceptual models. They also had opportunities to share and compare data collected by teachers and students at five other LTER sites. All workshop activities and research projects were correlated with state science and math education standards, making them instantly relevant and useful for teachers in the upcoming school year.