1 / 11

Oceanography Undergraduate Education

Oceanography Undergraduate Education. GES: Interdisciplinary Rigorous Research focused B.S. degree. Educating Hawaii’s people through OCN 201 and 19 other undergraduate courses. UH and UHM Strategic Plans. Increase in degrees in STEM fields by 3% per year through 2015

Télécharger la présentation

Oceanography Undergraduate Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oceanography Undergraduate Education GES: Interdisciplinary Rigorous Research focused B.S. degree Educating Hawaii’s people through OCN 201 and 19 other undergraduate courses

  2. UH and UHM Strategic Plans Increase in degrees in STEM fields by 3% per year through 2015 Increase native Hawaiians in STEM fields Involve undergraduates in research Focus on needs of State

  3. Service to UH and Hawaii • Science of the Sea (OCN 201 and 201L) • 500-550 students/yr • Global Environmental Change (OCN 310) • 40-60 students/semester • Aquatic Pollution (OCN 320) • 50-55 students/yr • Living Resources of the Sea (OCN 331) • 25 students/semester • Energy & Mineral Resources (OCN 330) • 25 students/semester • Enrollment dominated by nonmajors

  4. New Directions • Educational pedagogy – moving away from pure lecture courses • Discussion groups • Class projects • Student writing • Field work/trips • Use of clickers • Distance learning • HITS – e.g. OCN 331

  5. What We Want/Need • Increased enrollments • Agreement with A&S on credit requirement • HITS support • Increased faculty participation • TAs • Loss of a TA means loss of a 201 lab section • New teaching techniques require more instructor/student interaction and supervision

  6. GES Program – A Great Success • Started in 1998 • Rigorous BS; unique combination of breadth and focus • 63 graduates • 30 to graduate school • 24 to environmentally related jobs • 9 to military, other, or unknown

  7. GES Current Students • 55 majors • 30% local, 40% mainland, 30% international • Research experience is key – rewarding, but challenging • Connecting students and mentors • Funding projects • Guidance through process • Time to completion

  8. GES Plans - Recruitment • Top students everywhere • Improved website • Mailings/advertising • Increase numbers of Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders • Working with CMORE • Tutoring/mentoring/financial support are key

  9. GES Plans - Curriculum • Evaluation of current courses • Coord. of 310, 310L, 401 • More rigorous version of 310 • More rigorous version of 201? • Need more biology in curriculum • Ecosystem-scale biology • Support for new hire in coral reefs/climate change

  10. GES Plans - Curriculum • Course development • Research oriented course coord. w/ HIOOS • To shepherd students into thesis topics • Students would work up data sets from HIOOS projects such as Kilo Nalu, CRIMP, HOTS, etc. • Project would continue in a second semester OCN 499 with faculty mentor • OCN 363 provides prerequisites skills in Matlab and data handling • Field trips/field work • Would need a TA

  11. Summary • Service courses and GES degree are in good shape • To move forward with enrollments and program development: • Scholarships & Research Fellowships • Website upgrade/advertising support • TAs • Addition of coral reefs/climate change expertise • Agreement with A&S

More Related