Media advisory issued July 19, 2004, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org.
Noble Foundation Starts Science Teacher Education Program
ARDMORE, Okla. Founded by OMRF in 1993, OSP's goal is to provide secondary
school science teachers with a meaningful research experience. The program gives
preference to teachers from rural areas of Oklahoma who do not have as many
benefits and resources as urban or suburban schools. The OMRF-OSP program focuses
on genes, mutations and heredity. Although research-centered, OSP does not seek
to turn teachers into scientists, but into better teachers of science.
Noble-OSP extends these principles into a plant-related field of study, hosting
four secondary school teachers for six weeks during the summer. Each teacher,
a "graduate" of the OMRF-OSP program, continues his or her research
experience with a complementary program focused on plant-related biology, genetics
and biotechnology.
In Noble-OSP, the summer begins with initial "gateway" experiments
that permit teachers to understand and then undertake a complex gene discovery
research project that leverages expertise and research programs underway at
Noble.
"I did not design the curriculum to 'teach,' because the teachers already
know the subject matter," said Dr. Robert Gonzales, science director for
Noble-OSP. "I wanted them to experience science. As such, we have lab demonstrations
in genetics so they can actually see and do something they teach from a science
textbook. But the greatest impact is for them to actually participate in a real
scientific research project. This first group of teachers started the preliminary
work that will ultimately result in the cloning and description of a currently
unknown 'gene.'"
Teachers in the inaugural class of Noble-OSP are:
Calvin Aldrich: zoology, botany, human anatomy and physiology and AP environmental
science teacher at Byng High School — Aldrich has been teaching for eight
years and is a 2003 OMRF-OSP participant. He said he came to Noble-OSP because
he likes to learn and do science, but, most importantly, because he hopes he'll
be able to show his students opportunities so their interest and vision will
increase, making them more comfortable outside of Byng.
Dominie Dew: physical and environmental science teacher at Lawton High School
— After attending OMRF-OSP in 2002, Dew was offered a position with the
program. For the past year, she has been working to develop OMRF-OSP biology
curriculum; she'll return to the classroom in August. Dew believes that when
teachers experience science in a true research setting, they are better able
to relay that experience to their students.
Janet Clemons: biology I, chemistry, physics, AP biology and Italian teacher
at Smithville High School — Clemons has been teaching since 1984. She
began participating in OMRF-OSP in 1999, returning in 2000 and 2003. She thinks
students must understand the role of technology in science, and through this
experience at the Noble Foundation, she will have a better understanding of
evolving technologies, which is essential to passing that knowledge on to her
students.
Susan Hofstetter: biology and physiology teacher at Booker T. Washington High
School (Tulsa) — Hofstetter, a teacher for 12 years, participated in the
OMRF telescience program in 2000 and is a return teacher for OMRF-OSP in 2004.
She was intrigued by Noble-OSP because the research would be in plant genetics
and the idea of using plants in her classroom was a draw. Hofstetter says it
is wonderful to gain experience in different areas because she feels much more
knowledgeable and well rounded in the content she is teaching in the classroom.
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a
non-profit organization conducting agricultural, forage improvement, and plant
biology research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational
and health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational
and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, visit the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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