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West Virginia Univ brings STEM program to Summit


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http://wvutoday.wvu.edu/n/2016/03/21/wvu-boy-scouts-team-up-to-develop-stem-program-at-summit-bechtel-reserve

March 21,2016

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An interdisciplinary team of researchers from West Virginia University will join with the Boy Scouts of America to establish an environmental science, technology, engineering, and math education and research program at Bechtel Summit Reserve near Oak Hill.

 

The team from WVU’s Davis College of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Design and the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences will introduce scouts and their adult leaders to the environmental STEM field, particularly the aquatic sciences, while using the site as an ecology observatory and laboratory, said Paul Ziemkiewicz, director of the West Virginia Water Research Institute.

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Through the program, scouts will earn merit badges while learning about ecology, biology, water science, wildlife and wetlands. Scouts will receive hands-on training through taking measurements, entering data and plotting simple graphs to see the results.

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Federal funding of this project is provided through the U.S. Geological Survey’s section 104b program. The USGS awards 104b grants to State Water Research Institutes that have been established in each of the 50 states, three U.S. territories and the District of Columbia under the provisions of the Water Resources Research Act of 1984. The West Virginia Water Research Institute, a program of WVU’s National Research Center for Coal and Energy, serves as a statewide vehicle for performing research related to water issues. WVWRI is the premiere water research center in West Virginia and, within selected fields, an international leader.

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Oh, the opportunity to get boys (especially from out of state) singing "Country Road" before they even think about college applications? You bet they will try to keep this going. Fact is scouts whose first love is the outdoors would be ideally suited for many of WVU's branch campuses. In addition, college students improve their science skills dramatically if they have someone to teach those skills to.

 

By the way, your USGS and state survey offices are great resources for materials (and possibly presenters) of interest to many of your boys.

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