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July
27, 2007 HAMPTON, Va. --
It's a warm afternoon in a
high school Earth science class, and the lesson for the day is about
Earth's
troposphere. While scribbling down notes as fast as possible, the
students ask
themselves, "Who would ever need to use this information?" The answer is
NASA. It is now possible to add
that "real world" element to teaching by incorporating data from NASA
satellites and observations. On July 29, a week-long workshop led by
scientists
at This annual summer
workshop is sponsored by
MY NASA DATA, a project in which a team of scientists takes large
volumes of
data and generates understandable microsets to be used by the public.
The
microsets are primarily used by educators to bring a twenty-first
century
dimension to the teaching of Earth science. "While only a
small number of teachers
can attend the workshop, we are very pleased to know that over 8,000
people
worldwide are accessing the MY NASA DATA Web site each month," said Dr.
Lin Chambers, the NASA Langley atmospheric scientist who leads the
project.
"As a The workshop
guides teachers through the
exploration of a variety of NASA Earth science data, using it to create
engaging lesson plans. Students use scientific inquiry and math skills
as they
access and display microsets of the Earth System. "When students
realize that scientists
are truly using the same set of data, it brings relevance to the class
and the
lesson is no longer intangible," explains Susan Moore, a member of the
MY
NASA DATA team. The MY NASA DATA
Web site collects all of the
lessons that have been put together by previous workshop participants,
as well
as archived data microsets. Teachers can go online and search for the
data that
is relevant to their lectures and create their own captivating lesson
plans. "When the teachers
get excited about the
data, that energy is transferred to the students," says ##
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