Cornell news release

Teachers are students, too, at CU-UNH Shoals Marine Lab learning island

FOR RELEASE: April 1, 2004

Contact: Roger Segelken
Office: 607-255-9736
E-Mail: hrs2@cornell.edu

Instruction in using a plankton net prepares adult students for a day of collecting aboard the R/V Kingsbury, the larger of the Shoals Marine Lab's research vessels. Kathleen Conn.Copyright © Cornell University Click on the image for a high-resolution version (1600 x 1200 pixels, 978K)
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Summer noncredit courses for adults and families -- everything from island bird study, painting and nature photography to marine-mammal study, gardening and kayaking -- lure visitors off the Maine-New Hampshire coast to Appledore Island, the Shoals Marine Laboratory (SML) base that has become a learning island for students of all ages. Even teachers.

Established more than 35 years ago as a seasonal field station for undergraduates studying marine sciences, the Cornell University-University of New Hampshire program soon expanded to share the island's resources with the general public and alumni who wanted to learn about sea life in a stimulating environment. In 2003 SML added family-oriented programs, such as "Kids Ahoy! Discovering Marine Science for the Whole Family," as well as marine-science programs for schoolteachers who refused to nap through their summer vacations. New this summer at Shoals Marine Laboratory is a special, one-week session of Cornell's Institute for Biology Teachers (CIBT).

This teacher-training program, originally funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, has become a national model for university-based curriculum development in the public schools. The 2004 CIBT session at Shoals Marine Laboratory is fully subscribed. However openings are still available in all 2004 noncredit programs:

Shoals research vessel
The R/V Heiser, smaller of Shoals Marine Lab's two research vessels, heads back to the Appledore Island home of the seasonal field station. Ron Sher.Copyright © Cornell University Click on the image for a high-resolution version (1432 x 1073 pixels, 909K)
Shoals Marine Laboratory alumni and their children and spouses are eligible for a 15 percent discount on fees, which include meals, lodging and instruction. For more information, visit http://www.sml.cornell.edu/ , e-mail shoals-lab@cornell.edu or phone 255-3717.

In addition, two-, four- and six-credit summer college courses are offered at Shoals Marine Laboratory, beginning May 24, at fees ranging from $1,060 to $3,530. Among the introductory-level course are Field Marine Science, Field Marine Biology and Ecology, and Introduction to Marine Science. Another summertime introductory course, Tropical Marine Science, is given at Akumal, Mexico. Process and experimental courses include Research in Marine Biology, Ecology of Animal Behavior and Underwater Research, and organismal biology courses range from Field Ornithology, Marine Vertebrates and the Biology of Marine Invertebrates to Seaweeds, Plankton and Seagrass. Environmental/applied courses on Shoals Marine Laboratory's summer 2004 schedule are Climates and Ecosystems, Field Marine Ecology and Environmental Science for Teachers, Marine and Coastal Geology and Biological Illustration. Course descriptions and registration details are at http://www.sml.cornell.edu/ .

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