2024 Denver National Conference

March 20-23, 2024

Additional sessions will be added as they are accepted and confirmed over the next several weeks.
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FILTERS APPLIED:9 - 12, Presentation, Connecting with Nature

 

Rooms and times subject to change.
15 results
Save up to 50 sessions in your agenda.

Bat Houses to Reduce Malaria Infections

Thursday, March 21 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Mile High Ballroom 4D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Bat House 2024.pptx
The PowerPoint for Bat House Creations

STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Undergraduate researchers built a bat house on the Amazon River Basin. The project goals were: 1.) provide natural remediation, 2.) create a marketable commodity (guano), and 3.) reduce overhead costs. The venture has proven beneficial and has far-reaching global effects on the most at-risk humans.

TAKEAWAYS:
Several benefits for the Maijuna can be replicated in other communities. International historical bat projects will be shared. Future ventures with tropical bat houses and other natural resources will be shared. The main takeaway is the use of the natural environment to battle current human struggles.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Bechtel (Wartburg College: Waverly, IA)

Showing Students the Love of Nature

Thursday, March 21 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Hyatt Regency Denver - Mineral Hall B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1meDDQSdVK8rKc32NQm2BkfQPciEFyNR5r-hwwKkymHc/edit?usp=sharing
Presentation with links.

STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Three different options will be shared that will help teachers bring their students outside where they can connect with nature. This includes 2 PBLs. Logistics and content will be clearly explained so that teachers can use these ideas immediately with their classes that focus on ecology.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn 3 different successful low-cost activities (including 2 PBLs) that they can use directly in their classrooms to connect their students with nature regardless of their geographic location. The presenter will share materials to help teachers plan logistics and content.

SPEAKERS:
Nadene Klein (Daniel C. Oakes High School: Castle Rock, CO)

Conservation Connections Through Community Citizen Science

Thursday, March 21 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Hyatt Regency Denver - Mineral Hall C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Conservation Connections through Community Citizen Science

STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Learn citizen science activities to increase student engagement. Join a classroom teacher, National Geographic Explorer, and an education specialist at the Jacksonville Zoo, and integrate geospatial applications to help students build science skills through connections in their local community.

TAKEAWAYS:
Youth can drive change as citizen scientists in their local community while developing science skills in field research and data collection. Educators will learn how to empower youth to address community issues as young scientists and changemakers of tomorrow.

SPEAKERS:
Emily Blum (School Program Specialist: Jacksonville, FL), Alicia Pressel (Creekside High School: St Johns, FL)

A Crash-Course in Meteorite Science: What You Need To Know About the Amazing, Mind-Boggling, and Potentially Scary World of Meteorites and Asteroids!

Friday, March 22 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Mile High Ballroom 2B


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

There is no shortage of jaw-dropping discoveries made from meteorites. Known as the “poor man’s space probe” most meteorites come from the asteroid belt. Now that we have actual material from a known asteroid we better sharpen up about meteorite science, because we’re going to need it.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn the exciting history and evolution of meteorites science through meteorite falls and discoveries. 500 years ago to the most recent meteoritic events, the science just keeps pouring out of these enigmatic rocks from space. Meteorites are the foundation for sample-return missions.

SPEAKERS:
Martin Horejsi (University of Montana: Missoula, MT)

Where Does Your Water Come From and Where Does it Go?

Friday, March 22 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Colorado Convention Center - 712


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

A look to the water source of your place; the flow and distribution of water, and how water was an integral part of indigenous cultures. Examples of the interaction and interdependence of water in a variety of cultural ecosystem settings and society.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will reflect on where their water comes from, it's path, and it's importance in the culture of their place, their surrounding indigenous practices, and compare their water source with global communities.

SPEAKERS:
Kimberley Norris-Jones (Richland Northeast Hs: Columbia, SC), Diane Tom-Ogata (W. R. Farrington High School: Honolulu, HI)

From the Barrens to the Bay — Developing a Project-Based, Outdoor Environmental Science Curriculum with Community Partnerships

Friday, March 22 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Hyatt Regency Denver - Centennial Ballroom G



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://sites.google.com/prsdnj.org/prhshonorsecology/home
Barrens to Bay course website/blog
PRHS Barrens To Bay NSTA Presentation.pdf
Presentation from 3/22/24

STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

This session will inspire you to take your classes outside by featuring a high school ecology class that promotes student discovery of local ecosystems, campus stewardship, and engagement with the science community (professional partnerships on grants/projects to explore & restore native habitats).

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will be inspired to put textbooks aside and get outside to create meaningful experiences that connect students to local ecosystems, deepen understanding of concepts, & build community in/around their school. Participants will be able to identify essential steps to creating a similar course.

SPEAKERS:
Jim Ardoin (Pinelands Regional High School: Tuckerton, NJ), Kimberly Clark (Pinelands Regional Junior High School: Little Egg Harbor, NJ)

CAST: Wolf Reintroduction â€” Connecting Science and Society

Friday, March 22 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Colorado Convention Center - 103/105


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

CO voter's approved Prop 114, a plan to restore and manage gray wolves in CO. Join CPW to learn how you can engage students in lessons that utilize this current and relevant work to understand the relationship between science and society in conservation and wildlife management.

TAKEAWAYS:
Conservation and wildlife management does not happen in a silo, but needs to take into account many stakeholders' wants, needs, and concerns. It's important to understand the perceptions of people as much as the ecological and biological requirements of a species for a reintroduction to be successful.

SPEAKERS:
Heather Hubbard (Statewide Formal Education Coordinator: Denver, CO)

Promoting Sustainability Awareness at a Title One School in the Alabama Black Belt Region

Saturday, March 23 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 2G


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Combating the loud noises of systemic oppression often faced by students of color in the Alabama Black Belt entails creating space for them to rely on their cultures, their lived experiences, and their talents to address environmental problems that disproportionately affect their communities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to make the concept of sustainability culturally relevant to their historically marginalized student groups living in impoverished areas.

SPEAKERS:
Eshwaa Godfrey (Selma High School: Selma, AL), Venecia Eaton (Selma High School: Selma, AL), Mashika Tempero (Selma High School: Selma, AL)

CAST: Exploring the Life Cycle of Monarchs as a Biology Anchoring Phenomenon in Colorado

Saturday, March 23 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Colorado Convention Center - 103/105


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Join this session where we explore the use of raising monarch butterflies as an anchoring phenomenon to delve into the characteristics of life, local ecosystems, conservation, and citizen science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave this session with resources to engage students in a long-term project that fosters curiosity in local ecosystems and inspires a call for action, along with two assessment measures. Student work samples will be available for attendees.

SPEAKERS:
Aja Mattise-Lorenzen (High School Science Teacher: Fort Collins, CO), Dr. Yajaira Fuentes-Tauber (Rocky Mountain High School: Fort Collins, CO)

Revamping Agricultural Science in Urban Africa

Saturday, March 23 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 2H


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

This paper explores sustainable urban agriculture in Lagos, Nigeria, addressing 21st-century demands through innovative methods for city-based agricultural science education.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how sustainable urban agriculture education in Lagos can empower students to tackle 21st-century agricultural challenges.

SPEAKERS:
Adetola Salau (University at Buffalo, SUNY: Buffalo, NY)

Ocean Acidification: Investigating the Changes in Oceanic pH & Dissolved Inorganic Carbon Concentrations Resulting from Increased Atmospheric CO2

Saturday, March 23 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 2F


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Students often find it perplexing that elevated atmospheric CO2 reduces carbonate ion concentrations in the ocean as they learn that increasing the concentration of reactants enhances product formation. Join this session to explore the underlying processes using an interactive computer model.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will utilize an interactive computer model to investigate how three interconnected reactions influence oceanic pH and dissolved inorganic carbon dynamic as atmospheric CO2 level changes. They will also receive ready-to-use classroom activity materials and tips for implementation.

SPEAKERS:
Lin Xiang (University of Kentucky: Lexington, KY)

Cultivating a Connection with Nature Through Students' Botanical Histories

Saturday, March 23 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 2G


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

This session will emphasize the power of connecting with nature through the sharing of instructional modules. These modules have been thoughtfully designed to foster relationships between herbaria and high school students with the primary objective of underscoring the significance of plants.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants in this session will gain a deep appreciation for nature's wonders and the vital role plants play in our ecosystem. By exploring our free instructional modules, they will discover innovative ways to connect high school students with the natural world.

SPEAKERS:
Kelly Moore (Tennessee Tech: Cookeville, TN)

Bringing the Science of Solar Eclipses Into the Classroom: Design of a New York State Eclipse Weather Experiment

Saturday, March 23 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 2H


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

There will be two solar eclipses in New York, a partial and a total eclipse. We have designed an Eclipse Weather Experiment to record temperature, cloud coverage, and wind speed. We will launch a high-altitude balloon and the combined observations will elucidate eclipse-induced weather changes.

TAKEAWAYS:
Construction of a high-altitude balloon is a very useful STEM activity as it requires engineering skills, knowledge of topics in physics and chemistry, and simulation of the equations of motion that will appeal to computer-oriented students.

SPEAKERS:
Matthew Yatsyla (Caroline G Atkinson Elem: Freeport, NY)

The Dinosaur Apocalypse: One Outdoor Educator's Guide to the Frontiers of Colorado, Science, and Education

Saturday, March 23 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Colorado Convention Center - Mile High Ballroom 1C


STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Presented by an author of more than thirty peer-reviewed regional and international journal papers on the topic, this presentation tells the world-renowned story of Colorado's rocks through the rocks themselves and the people who have studied the K/Pg boundary.

TAKEAWAYS:
Although scientific revolutions or advancement often occur through new discoveries and technology, some major revolutions occur simply because of changes in the way that we perceive the world around us—demonstrated through a virtual hike across a world-famous K/Pg boundary outcrop.

SPEAKERS:
Keith Berry (Hoehne Re-3 School District: No City, No State)

Student Research: How To Initiate and Carry Out a Science Research Program at Your School

Saturday, March 23 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Colorado Convention Center - Bluebird Ballroom 3E



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Authentic Science Research in the Secondary School Classroom_NSTA_2024.pdf

STRAND: Connecting with Nature

Show Details

Have you ever wanted to start a science research program and get your students involved in authentic scientific research? Learn how to initiate and run a science research program at your school, including the benefits, methods, and challenges involved.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to initiate and operate a program of student scientific research at your school. Discussion of choosing research topics, timetables, challenges, and possible venues of the presentations of the students' final results will be covered.

SPEAKERS:
Olivia Kuper (North Greene High School: Greeneville, TN), Thomas Rutherford (East Tennessee State University, King University: Johnson City, TN)

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