GeoEd Program: Track 2 Integrative Collaboration: the Sensor Network: A New Bay Areas ReGENA on Air Quality and Greenhouse Gases
This collaboration between the University of California at Berkeley (UCB) and the Chabot Space and Science Center (Chabot) is engaging local students, educators, and the public in hands-on activities and informal educational opportunities that focus on climate science and the measurement of air quality and greenhouse gases (GHG) in the greater San Francisco Bay Area. The project leverages a new network of about 250 research nodes with sensors that constantly collect atmospheric data (CO2, CO, NO2, O3, temperature and relative humidity) currently under development for deployment in the San Francisco Bay Area. Through this award, 22 nodes of the network that will provide data for use in K-12 educational programs administered by Chabot are being built and deployed.
Seminars, classes, teacher trainings, website information and exhibits on the science of climate change that support the educational use of this network are being created to support in-service teachers and their students from four schools in the region, including the highly diverse Oakland Unified School District. Joint activities to bring UCB faculty, graduate students and undergraduate researchers into regular contact with the in-service teachers and K-12 students from the greater Bay Area are included in the project. Data collected through the sensor network offers a place-based teaching opportunity for students in the Chabot programs and at host site schools. An annual seminar to report on the scientific results of the study offers an additional opportunity for engagement of the K-12 students, teachers and members of the public who participate in Chabot's educational efforts.
The project supports a developing regional alliance between the UCB Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP) Program, the UCB Earth and Planetary Sciences Department and Atmospheric Science Center, Chabot and its partner, the Oakland Unified School District, for the specific purpose of increasing the participation of traditionally underrepresented students in the geosciences and STEM disciplines. The project provides a new model for integrating research, education, and outreach that can be replicated in municipalities around the globe.

Funding agency NSF
Through the funding program CCE, Geoscience Education Program
Award Numbers GEO - 1035050
Selection Year:Award Period:
Products
Opportunities to work on climate science with researchers, and to learn/engage in outreach with K-12 teachers and students.
Grade Level: College Lower (13-14), College Upper (15-16), Graduate/Professional
Audience Type: Students
Product Type: Professional Development
Instrumentation for observing CO2 in sensor networks and associated curricula.
Audience Type: Students, Educators
Product Type: Curriculum