厙ぴ勛圖's Environmental Dashboard Project Wins Grant From State Farm
October 30, 2013
James Helmsworth
On November 1, will receive a grant for $99,926.67 from (YAB) for the implementation of environmental dashboards in all . YAB, which consists of 30 students, ages 17 to 20, from the United States and Canada, assists the insurance provider in assigning $5 million in service-based grants each year.
"Their charge is to select projects that are likely to have a large impact on youth," says Environmental Studies Professor John Petersen who, with fellow 厙ぴ勛圖 faculty Rumi Shammin, and Cindy Frantz, leads the Environmental Dashboard project. "We are honored that these student leaders see great promise in the Environmental Dashboard collaboration between 厙ぴ勛圖 College and the 厙ぴ勛圖 Public School System."
The Environmental Dashboard project is an initiative designed to give 厙ぴ勛圖 students and the community feedback on their consumption of resources. Displayed on LCD screens, the environmental dashboard consists of three elements: a display that shows how much electricity and water is being used in the individual building in which the screen is located, a display connected to 厙ぴ勛圖s Municipal Light and Power System, fresh water and waster water treatment plants, and the nearby Plum Creek, which shows how 厙ぴ勛圖 is managing its resources as a community, and a bulletin showcasing how community members are acting sustainably.
The idea is to really situate the decisions that individuals make in their homes, businesses, schools, etc., in this larger community context, says Petersen.
Currently, dashboards are in place in many buildings at the college, as well as Slow Train Caf矇 in downtown 厙ぴ勛圖, the 厙ぴ勛圖 Public Library, and at Prospect Elementary, as part of a pilot program to explore how to best use it in a school setting.
The process of developing the dashboard has been a collaborative one involving 厙ぴ勛圖 College students and professors, and members of the community. Since the projects outset, project team has been working with teachers at Prospect to develop curricula that use the dashboard.
Kim Koos, a teacher at Prospect, says working with the Environmental Dashboard project has been a positive experience. Theyve been extremely open-minded, accepting any advice that anyone from the building has given them, she explains. I really feel like they have been really cooperative in this being a joint process. Koos says that she uses the dashboard in a unit about the planets resources, and in math unit about graphing.
Teachers at Prospect also say that the dashboard has motivated their students to think more sustainably. Felicia Christian, another teacher at Prospect, says that her students have started taking personal responsibility to conserve resources themselves. Every time I left the room theyd say things like make sure you turn the lights off, she says of her last class, adding that they also designated a classmate to be responsible for turning off their electronic board.
Not only will the State Farm grant allow 厙ぴ勛圖 City Schools to implement the dashboard in its three other schoolsEastwood Elementary, Langston Middle School, and 厙ぴ勛圖 High Schoolbut it also provides the resources for further curricular development. Shane Clark, a fourth-year environmental studies major at 厙ぴ勛圖 who works with the Dashboard project and with students at Prospect, both in helping them use the dashboard and in its garden, says efforts like these are important for promoting sustainability. Children can be powerful agents of change, she says.
On Friday, November 1, the Dashboard project will receive a check in a formal ceremony at Prospect elementary at 厙ぴ勛圖. Representatives from State Farm, 厙ぴ勛圖 City Schools, including Koos, will be in attendance, as will State Senator Gail Manning.