|
The
NewsRoom
Release: #3264
Date: March 23, 2005
Federal Agencies Join JASON
Expedition to Spark
Local Interest in Science and the Environment
VENTURA, Calif. ---Nutria and crawfish of the
Louisiana wetlands met the island fox and pacific rockfish of
California at the February, 2005 JASON Project live broadcasts in
Ventura County, California.
Local 5th and 6th grade students journeyed to the
Ventura County Superintendent of Schools’ Conference Center recently
to explore the wetlands of Louisiana through real-time live satellite
and Internet broadcasts. Students communicated with onsite scientists
and students explorers, called Argonauts, to investigate the unique
environments and strange creatures found in Louisiana wetlands.
This event was made possible, in part, by The JASON
Foundation for Education, a non-profit educational organization,
founded in 1989 by oceanographer Robert D. Ballard who in 1986
discovered the wreck of the ill-fated Titanic. JASON uses multimedia
and cutting-edge technology to engage students in scientific research
and annual expeditions to interesting environments around the world.
Its mission is to inspire students to take an interest in science,
math, and technology through hands-on, real-world scientific
discovery.
The live broadcasts were supplemented with learning
stations led by local JASON partners from the Minerals Management
Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. MMS
and Channel Islands National Park led learning stations along with
NOAA’s Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Through hands-on
activities, the three federal agencies introduced students to coastal
and ocean environments along Ventura County.
"Our JASON agency partners really helped bridge the
science and technology themes of the live broadcasts to our local
environment," said Cathy Reznicek, JASON coordinator for the Ventura
County Superintendent of Schools. "Thanks to the wonderful
collaboration between MMS, the Channel Islands National Park, and the
Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, Ventura County students
were able to learn about local habitats and ongoing federal research
being conducted right off our coast in the Santa Barbara Channel."
MMS learning stations focused on the agency’s
ongoing environmental studies through hands-on activities. Students
tracked winds, waves and currents in the Santa Barbara Channel using
real-time data and conducted mussel counts from photo plots taken of
MMS-monitored California rocky intertidal sites. Students also learned
about rockfish populations found around local offshore platforms in
the Channel.
Although JASON's standards-based Expeditions and
Science and Math Adventures curricula are geared to students in grades
4 through 9, teachers draw on the programs to engage students
throughout the elementary and high-school grades.
According to JASON representatives, the program
serves nearly 1.7 million students each year, and is used by
approximately 33,000 teachers in the U.S. and abroad.
MMS, part of the U.S. Department of the Interior,
oversees 1.76 billion acres of the Outer Continental Shelf, managing
offshore energy and minerals while protecting the human, marine, and
coastal environments through advanced science and technology research.
The OCS provides 30 percent of oil and 23 percent of natural gas
produced domestically, and sand used for coastal restoration. MMS
collects, accounts for, and disburses mineral revenues from Federal
and American Indian lands, with Fiscal Year 2004 disbursements of
approximately $8 billion and more than $143 billion since 1982. The
Land and Water Conservation Fund, which pays for cooperative
conservation, grants to states, and federal land acquisition, gets
nearly $1 billion a year.
Relevant Web Sites:
MMS Main Website
Media Contacts:
John Romero
(805) 389-7533
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for
America
U.S. Department of the Interior
Privacy |
Disclaimers |
Accessibility |
Topic Index | FOIA

|