COSEE Network: The overall mission is "to spark and nurture collaborations among research scientists and educators to advance ocean discovery and make known the vital role of the ocean in our lives."
Although each Center is funded individually, the Network of Centers has established its own set of goals:
1) Fostering the integration of ocean research into high-quality educational materials
2) Enabling ocean researchers to gain a better understanding of educational organizations and pedagogy
3) Enhancing educators' capacity to deliver high-quality educational programs in the ocean sciences
4) Promoting a deeper understanding of the ocean and its influence on each person's quality of life and our national prosperity
Harmful Algae
This website from NOAA and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is meant to serve as a comprehensive resource for information about harmful algal blooms (HABs). Links include basic information about HABs, how they affect humans and ecosystems, the latest HAB news, and information about meetings and conferences.
Information Science
Bounds and Vision
Atlas of Science Visualizing What We Know by Katy Börner MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2010. 266 pp. $$29.95, £22.95. ISBN 9780262014458.
1. Mason A. Porter
+ Author Affiliations
1.
The reviewer is at the Oxford Centre for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3LB, UK, and at the CABDyN Complexity Centre and Somerville College, University of Oxford.
1. E-mail: porterm@maths.ox.ac.uk
Visualization is a crucial but underappreciated part of science. As venues like the American Physical Society's Gallery of Fluid Motion and Gallery of Nonlinear Images illustrate every year, good visuals can make science more beautiful, more artistic, more tangible, and often more discernible. Katy Börner's continuing exhibition Places & Spaces: Mapping Science (1) and her book Atlas of Science: Visualizing What We Know arise from a similar spirit but are much more ambitious.
Visualization is one of the most compelling aspects of science. Breathtaking visuals from sources like fractals and Disneyland's long-dead "Adventure Thru Inner Space" ride are what originally inspired me toward my personal scientific path, so I welcome any resource that promises to bring the visual joys of discovery to a wide audience. Importantly, Börner's exhibition and book are not mere artistic manifestations, although they would be impressive accomplishments even if that were her only goal. Some scientists have occasionally had great success in the visual arts; for example, physicist Eric Heller has long exhibited the gorgeous fruits of his research on quantum chaos and other topics (2). To fully appreciate Börner's efforts, however, one must be conscious that she is deeply concerned not just with visualization itself but with the science of visualization. Accordingly, her book discusses the history of the science of visualization, where it is now, and where she thinks it can go. Atlas of Scie
How important are museums, TV shows and after school clubs to teaching kids science? Ira Flatow and guests look at "informal science education" and what researchers are learning about learning science. Plus, what's the best way to keep undergraduate science majors in science?
The Ocean Conservancy
pdf document, 35 pages, 2005
20th anniversary International Coastal Cleanup
The Ocean Conservancy promotes healthy and diverse ocean ecosystems and opposes practices that threaten ocean life and human life. Through research, education, and science-based advocacy, The Ocean Conservancy informs, inspires, and empowers people to speak and act on behalf of the oceans. In all its work, The Ocean Conservancy strives to be the world's foremost advocate for
the oceans.
The International Coastal Cleanup engages people to remove trash and debris from the world's beaches and waterways, to identify the sources of debris, and to change the behaviors that cause pollution.
Introduction
How to Use This Book
Quick Tips
- Shoreline Cleanup
- Underwater Cleanup
Estimating Weights and Distances
The World of Marine Debris
Activities That Produce Debris
Sample Data Card
Items Listed on the Data Card
Debris Items of Local Concern
Potentially Hazardous Items
Stranded or Entangled Animals
Natural Items
Peculiar Items
Other Volunteer Opportunities
- National Marine Debris Monitoring Program
- RECON
- Storm Drain Sentries
- Ocean Action Network
- Ocean Wilderness
More Information
Objectives:
Over one-half billion dollars are spent on over-the-counter antacids
every year. An informed consumer will understand how antacids work and
will read the labels to see what ingredients are present. Based on this
information and on a knowledge of side effects, the student consumer
will be able to decide which, if any, antacid to choose.
Ocean Today Kiosk Online
This website provides access to current and archived videos of the Ocean Today kiosk at the Sant Ocean Hall in the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History. The Ocean Today Kiosk is a dynamic, visitor-friendly multi-media experience that illustrates both the ocean's influence on humans and their influence upon the ocean. The website offers a transcript of the video along with links for more information.
"Since 2003, this online sibling to Science News - the award-winning magazine - has been at the forefront of science education. It highlights developments from all science disciplines, delivering the information to the screens of computers in schools and households across the world."
Wonderful student trips available to and starting from the Ocean Institute in Dana Point. Go learn some current ocean science that is aligned to the science standards!