A
STELLA Summer in the Rockies
By:
Dennis Ward
UCAR* Office of Education and Outreach
Scientists
at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado,
make extensive use of models in their daily work. For example, in order to
simulate the effects of climate change, they run complex models of the
atmosphere on a supercomputing cluster that provides approximately 14 billion
floating point operations per second. However, not every model requires this
much computing power. In order to create less complex models, some scientists
are turning to STELLA.
A
three-day workshop was recently conducted by HPS at UCAR for staff from three
groups-the Environmental and Societal Impacts Group (ESIG), the Office of
Education and Outreach (EO), and the Cooperative Program for Operational
Meteorology, Education and Training (COMET). These groups are now using STELLA
in their daily work. During the workshop, the participants covered the basics
of Systems Thinking as well as the software mechanics. Approximately 50% of the
workshop was devoted to working on individual or group projects, whose focus
ranged in scope from modeling the effects of drought on Denver's water supply
to calculating the growing seasons for a greenhouse on Mars and simulating the
"flow" of scientists through their careers at NCAR. The workshop was quite
useful to the participants, and it is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of
the growing potential for STELLA usage at NCAR.
ESIG,
in cooperation with EO & COMET, is currently working on a project to create
a game for use in undergraduate courses. It will present teams of players with
the opportunity to assume the roles of community leaders who are dealing with
the dynamics of a natural disaster such as a hurricane landfall. Although still
in development, it is anticipated that the game will take the form of a
computer-mediated board game, somewhat along the lines of Dennis Meadows'
Fishbanks, Ltd.
A
series of workshops incorporating STELLA are scheduled at NCAR for this summer.
ESIG will hold the "Advanced Institute on Urbanization, Emissions, and the
Global Carbon Cycle" in Boulder later this summer. This three-week institute,
supported by the David and Lucille Packard Foundation, will convene young
natural and social scientists, engineers, and urban planners from developing
countries to critically examine the most environmentally significant
interaction of cities with their environments, including the emission of both
long-lived greenhouse gases and short-lived polluting gases and particulates.
Each participant will receive a laptop computer and a license for STELLA
Research, along with intensive training on the exercise, modification, and
construction of STELLA models.
EO will
host two workshops that feature STELLA. The first, entitled the "Climate and
Global Change Geoscience Education Workshop," (http://www.ucar.edu/educ_outreach/gew )
will bring together 20 middle and high school teachers from across the US
together for two weeks to explore all aspects of the geosciences related to
climate and global change. Participants will experience presentations by
leaders in scientific research, training in hands-on and computer-based
activities, field trips, project work, and discussions about pedagogy,
educational standards, dissemination, and follow-up. Approximately two days of
this workshop will be devoted to STELLA modeling. During the STELLA training,
the teachers will construct a simple working model of the global carbon cycle
while learning the basic software mechanics. The teachers will be exposed to
other models, such as those simulating classic predator-prey dynamics. During
last year's workshop, half the teachers indicated their intentions to acquire
STELLA for their schools and incorporate modeling into their curricula.
EO's
second two-week workshop, sponsored by NASA's Earth System Enterprise, is
entitled "Modeling in the Geosciences." This workshop (http://www.ucar.edu/educ_outreach/mgw )
will introduce 20 middle and high school educators to modeling concepts,
provide opportunities to learn about state-of-the-art Earth system models used
by scientists, and provide training on models that can be used in the classroom
to explore Earth system concepts relevant to curriculum needs of educators as
expressed in the National Science Education Standards. STELLA will be used on a
daily basis as the "hands-on" modeling tool. Each teacher will leave the
workshop with a collection of models that can be used to convey concepts in the
geosciences to their middle and high school students, and a STELLA site license
for his or her school.
It is
safe to say that STELLA has found a new home in the Rockies.
* The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) manages both the
National Center for Atmospheric Research and the UCAR Office of Programs. UCAR,
sponsored by the National Science Foundation, is a consortium of over 66
universities throughout North America that grant doctoral degrees in the
atmospheric and related sciences, plus an increasing number of academic and
international affiliates and corporate partners.
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Dennis
Ward is the Web Technologist for UCAR's Office of Education and
Outreach in Boulder, Colorado. He has a B.A. from the Univ. of Alabama in
Birmingham and a M.S. in Astronomy from Swinburne University of Technology
in Melbourne, Australia. His major interests include K-12 geoscience
education and the dynamics of the primordial solar system.
Dennis
has been with UCAR for eight years, working on numerous distance
learning projects, web sites, and multimedia presentations. Before joining
UCAR, he was a training consultant in the private sector, specializing in
the pulp & paper industry. He served in the U.S. Navy as an officer on
board
the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69). He is a member of the American
Geophysical Union.
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