Initial Publication Date: November 29, 2008

The Eyes in the Sky Project Team

Carla McAuliffe, Ph.D., Co-PI, Project Director, Curriculum Developer, and Internal Evaluator

Dr. Carla McAuliffe is a professional development specialist, curriculum developer, project director, researcher, and internal evaluator at TERC, a non-profit research and development organization based in Cambridge, MA. She has taught junior high life and physical science, high school Earth science and biology, and various instructional technology courses for college. Dr. McAuliffe holds a Ph.D. in Learning and Instructional Technology and has facilitated numerous workshops and professional development experiences for teachers using visualization technologies. She has extensive experience developing instructional materials, including handbooks, workshop guides, classroom lessons, and distance learning Web pages. In addition to serving as Co-PI on the Eyes in the Sky project, she is PI on the EET Workshops project and Project Renewable Energy Data Investigations (REDI) and Co-PI on the Transforming Instruction by Design in Earth Science (TIDES) projects.

LuAnn Dahlman, B.S. Co-PI, Project Director and Curriculum Developer

LuAnn Dahlman is a Communications Specialist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Program Office. Ms. Dahlman received her BS degree in geology, worked in the minerals exploration industry, and taught Earth science at the high school level for seven years. At TERC, she served as project director, curriculum developer, and professional development instructor for a range of NSF- and NOAA-funded projects. Ms. Dahlman spent 9 weeks in Antarctica during the fall of 2006. As Co-PI of an IPY Informal Science Education project, she authored a book of hands-on activities that feature geologic evidence of past climates. The activity book plus accompanying banners and video podcasts form the foundation of outreach materials for the international ANDRILL project. The project is also producing a NOVA video titled Antarctica's Climate Warnings, scheduled to air in December of 2009.


Jeff Lockwood, Ed.D., Co-PI, Curriculum Developer and Workshop Leader

Jeff Lockwood
Dr. Jeff Lockwood currently works for TERC in Cambridge, Mass on several professional development projects, and has worked for NOAO, as Co-PI of the RBSE and TLRBSE projects since 1995. He wrote curriculum materials for such National Science Foundation programs as "Project STAR," "Hands-On Universe" and "Hands-On Astrophysics" while teaching high school astronomy, physics, Earth science, and astronomical research for 28 years at Sahuaro High School in Tucson, Arizona. Dr. Lockwood also taught planetary and stellar astronomy at Pima Community College for 20 years. He served on the ASP's Board of Directors from 1990 to 1996, and he was the author of the long-running "Black Holes to Blackboards" column on astronomy education in Mercury magazine.


Larry Kendall, M.A., Technical Support Specialist and Curriculum Developer

Larry Kendall has extensive teaching, teacher training, curriculum development, and technical support experience. After teaching science, mathematics, and technology for eleven years at the middle school and community college levels, he went on to develop GIT-based curriculum materials, lead teacher enhancement workshops, and present at major conferences. As part of the SAGUARO Project at the University of Arizona, Mr. Kendall co-authored the NSF-funded GIS Investigations for the Earth Sciences curriculum series, including Exploring the Dynamic Earth, Exploring Tropical Cyclones, and Exploring Water Resources, Exploring the Ocean Environment. Currently, he teaches Integrated Technology at Sitting Bull Middle School in Apple Valley, California.

Erin Bardar, Ph.D., Curriculum Developer

Erin Bardar
Dr. Erin Bardar is an experienced curriculum developer and education researcher. As a NASA Graduate Student Researchers Program (GSRP) fellow at Boston University, she developed the Light and Spectroscopy Concept Inventory for introductory college astronomy, was a major contributor to the NSF-funded Project LITE (Light Inquiry Through Experiments), and received a U.S. patent for a binocular spectrometer. She was an invited presenter at two NSF/NASA sponsored College Astronomy Teaching Excellence Workshops and has made multiple presentations at professional conferences. She was a lead curriculum developer for the EarthLabs project, in which students use satellite imagery, numerical data, and computer visualization software to explore Earth system processes. Dr. Bardar is currently writing chapters for the Earth Exploration Toolbook and NASA's Citizen Scientist's Guide to Earth Observations.