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Contributors
Credits
Series Producer
Clive Grainger
Producers
Shannon Densmore
Chris Schmidt
André Stark
Course Content Developer
Dr. Susan A. Mattson
Hosts
Dr. Douglas Zook
Boston University
Dr. Linda Grisham
Lesley University
Science Studio Facilitator
Dr. Eleanor Abrams
University of New Hampshire
Bottle Biology
Dr. Paul Williams
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Narrator
Anna Lewicke
Featured Classrooms
MaryAnn Bernstein, Grade 3
Fox Hill Elementary School
Burlington, MA
Mary Bitterlich, Grade 3
Glennon Heights Elementary School
Lakewood, CO
Sally A. Florkiewicz, Grade 3
Glennon Heights Elementary School
Lakewood, CO
LauraJo Kelly, Grade 2
Public School 276
Brooklyn, NY
Melissa Minnick, Grade 5
Glade Elementary School
Walkersville, MD
Gail Modugno, Grade 5
Alice B. Beal Elementary School
Springfield, MA
Stephanie Selznick, Grade 1
Holmes School
Dorchester, MA
Dr. Kathleen Vandiver, Grade 6
Diamond Middle School
Lexington, MA
Content Advisors
Dr. David Baum
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Dr. Brian White
University of Massachusetts Boston
Series Advisors
Dr. Eleanor Abrams
University of New Hampshire
Christina Bash
Salem, MA Public Schools
Dr. Cherry Brewton
Georgia Southern University
Patricia Goodnight
Washington D.C. Public Schools
Dr. Linda Grisham
Lesley University
Dr. John Kania
Assumption College, MA
Deborah Knight
Cambridge Friends School, MA
Diane Lonergan
Bedford, NH Public Schools
Dr. Ann Haley Mackenzie
Miami University, OH
Ellen Peterson
Weymouth, MA Public Schools
Dr. Irwin Shapiro
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Jeff Winokur
Education Development Center, MA
Dr. Douglas Zook
Boston University
Research Assistant
Zoe McKiness
Series Editors
Ian Albinson
Steven J. Allardi
Tom Lynn
Douglas K. Plante
Sandeep Ray
Additional Editing
Len Gittleman
Jim Shea
Dr. Valerie Weiss
Videographers
Thomas Danielczik
Clive A. Grainger
Kevin Hartfield
Gary Henoch
Alex Griswold
Tobias McElheny
David Rabinovitz
Sandeep Ray
Audio
Mario Cardenas
Joseph Chilorio
Charlie Collias
Robert Duggan
Dennis Fry
Lisa Haber-Thomson
Chi-Yun Lau
José Leon
Tobias McElheny
Andrew Neuman
Juan Rodriguez
Studio Lighting Gaffers
Jeffrey M. Hamel
Lee-Anthony Holloway
Original Music
Alison Reid
Treble Cove Music
Graphic Design/Animation
Ian Albinson
Steven J. Allardi
Mary Kocol
Tom Lynn
3-D Computer Animation
Chi-Yun Lau
Raedia Sikkema
Web Design
Alison Reid
Support Materials Developer
Chris Irwin
Production Coordinator
Lisa Friedman
Associate Producers
Yael Bowman
John D. Doan
Janice Fuld
Dr. Valerie Weiss
Production Assistants
Carla Blackmar
James Day
Robert Duggan
Lisa Haber-Thomson
Pamelita Leefatt
Lauren Peritz
Instructional Materials
Investigating
Life Cycles,
BSCS Science T.R.A.C.S.
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company
Causal Patterns in Ecosystems
Available through Project Zero: pzweb.harvard.edu/ucp/
This curriculum was developed with funding from the National Science
Foundation (Grant No. REC-97255-2 and REC-0106988.) All opinions,
findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed here are those
of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
National Science Foundation.
Bones
and Skeletons,
Insights
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company
Exploring with Wisconsin Fast
Plants
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company
Organisms
Science and Technology for Children
Carolina Biological Supply Company
SCIS 3+ Life Cycles
Delta Education
SCIS 3+ Communities
Delta Education
Images
Cyanobacteria image
John Patchett (University of Warwick), Mark Schneegurt (Wichita
State
University), and Cyanosite (www-cyanosite.bio.purdue.edu)
Readings
Reprinted from the Leeds National
Curriculum Science Support Project,
Leeds City Council/University
of Leeds.
Channel Operations
Manager
Bev King
Director of Outreach
Joyce Gleason
Outreach/Scheduling Consultant
Dana Rouse
Outreach Coordinator
Colleen Kern
Outreach Assistants
Amy Barber Biewald
Zenda Walker
Education Coordinators
Jeff Peyton
Alexander D. Ulloa
Financial Manager
Oral Benjamin
Administrator
Linda Williamson
Project Manager
Nancy Finkelstein
Executive Producer
Alex Griswold
Executive Director
Dr. Matthew H. Schneps
Course Developer
Sue Mattson, Ph.D.
Sue Mattson received a B.A. in biology from the
University of California at Berkeley, followed by a master’s
in biology and Ph.D. in science education from Florida State
University. Sue’s
dissertation focused on the dynamics involved as biologists and
science educators worked together to develop a biology course
for prospective elementary teachers. In addition to teaching biology
at the high
school,
community college, and university levels, her experiences include
curriculum development in the sciences and professional development
for teachers.
Sue has taught science methods courses for early childhood and
elementary education majors and served as an instructor in a
Web site-based distance
learning course for practicing elementary teachers seeking master’s
or specialist’s degrees in science and/or math education. She
has worked previously with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics in the following series: Case Studies in Science
Education, The Next
Move: Steps Toward Change in Elementary Math and Science, and
Looking at Learning…Again, Part I.
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Onscreen Guides
Eleanor Abrams, Ph.D.
Dr. Eleanor Abrams is an associate professor
at the University of New Hampshire. She is a member of the Department
of Education
and the interdisciplinary Natural Resources doctoral program.
She earned her B.S. in wildlife biology and botany and her doctoral
degree
in
science education from Louisiana State University (1994). Her
research focuses on how students learn content and the scientific
process through
project-based and technology-enriched curricula.
Dr. Abrams has
developed environmental curriculum where students work, often
with scientists, on authentic research projects.
One such project is the GLOBE program (Global Learning and Observation
to Benefit
the Environment) where K-12 students monitor the environmental
health of their local area and send the results to other schools
and scientists
via the World Wide Web.
Linda Grisham, Ph.D.
Linda Grisham received a B.A. in biochemistry
from the University of Chicago, followed by a Ph.D. in pharmacology
from Stanford
University. She has a deep commitment to science and math teacher
preparation, particularly for those who teach in underserved
communities. She has
worked over the years as a research scientist (University of
California, Santa Barbara and Brandeis University), science educator,
curriculum
developer, financial planner, community activist, and radio commentator.
Now at Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, she has
a joint appointment in the School of Undergraduate Studies, Natural
Science
Program and the School of Education and teaches undergraduate
and graduate level courses (physics, chemistry, modeling complex
systems,
pharmacology,
and science education). Current projects include the co-creation/implementation
of a fully online master's degree program, Science in Education
Program for K-8 teachers with TERC, Inc., a science- and math-focused
think
tank. She is also a founding member of the Institute for African-American
E-Culture.
Paul Williams, Ph.D.
Dr. Williams has been a professor in the Department
of Plant Pathology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison since
1962. He attended the University of British Columbia as an undergraduate
and received
his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Through his
research addressing the diseases of cabbages in the state of
Wisconsin was born
the idea of developing a rapid cycling plant (Fast Plants) as
a model for research with a wide range of biological and educational
applications.
He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1978, was
made a Fellow of the American Phytopathological Society in 1979
and served
as its president in 1989, and received the Eriksson Gold Medal
of the Royal
Swedish Academy of Science in 1981. He served as Director of
the Center for Biology Education on the Madison campus from 1989-1995
and was
named Atwood Distinguished Professor in the College of Agricultural
and Life Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1995.
He became a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement
of
Science in 1996 and received an honorary D.Sc. from the University
of British Columbia in 2001.
Douglas Zook, Ph.D.
Dr. Zook is an associate professor of science education
and biology at Boston University. He also directs the Master
of Arts in Teaching
program in science education. He is the co-founder and director
of the Microcosmos Professional Development Program for Science
Teachers and serves as president of the International Symbiosis
Society. Dr.
Zook received his Ph.D. from Clark University and did extensive
postdoctoral symbiosis research at the University of Tuebingen
as a
Fulbright Scholar.
Dr. Zook teaches a science methods course for students who intend
to become biology instructors. He also currently teaches a graduate
symbiosis
course and an undergraduate global ecology course.
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Curriculum
Developers
Programs 1 and 7
Dr. Herb Thier, SCIS 3+, Lawrence Hall of Science
Herbert D. Thier
is currently an academic administrator emeritus at the Lawrence
Hall of Science, University of California, Berkeley.
Thier received his B.A.
in physics and biology from the State University of New York, Albany in 1953
and his M.A. in school administration in1954. He received his Ed.D. in curriculum
and administration from New York University in 1962. Since 1963, he has been
leading instructional materials development and teacher enhancement projects
in science at the Lawrence Hall of Science. In 1975, he received (with M. Linn),
the JRST Research in Science Teaching Award of the National Association for Research
in Science Teaching. Thier received the Distinguished Service to Science Education
Award of the National Science Teachers Association in 1994 and the Distinguished
Service to Science Education Award of the Connecticut Science Supervisors Association
in 1996.
Program 2
Dr. Sally Goetz Shuler, Science and Technology for Children,
National Science
Resource Center
Sally Goetz Shuler is the executive director of the National Science
Resources Center (NSRC), which is sponsored by the Smithsonian
Institution and The National
Academies. The mission of the NSRC is to improve the teaching and learning of
science in the nation’s schools. In addition to managing the NSRC’s
professional development and outreach activities, Dr. Shuler oversees the development,
dissemination, and evaluation of curriculum and other teaching tools for students,
including the NSRC’s comprehensive science curriculum programs for K-8
students, Science and Technology (STC) and Science and Technology Concepts for
Middle School Students (STC/MS).
Dr. Shuler has over three decades of experience
working to improve K-12 science education at the local, national, and international
levels. At the classroom
level, she has ten years of experience as a high school biology, earth science,
and mathematics teacher in both private and public schools. She has also been
a science instructor for adult education in Fairfax County, Virginia. At the
district level, she served for five years as the K-12 science resource specialist
for the Fairfax County Public Schools, the nation’s tenth largest school
district. Dr. Shuler has a M.S. in environmental health sciences from George
Washington University, and a B.A. from Edinboro State University, with majors
in biology and geology.
Program 3
Dr. Rodger Bybee, Science TRACS (Teaching Relevant Activities
for Concepts and Skills), Biological Sciences Curriculum Study
(BSCS)
Rodger W. Bybee is executive director of the Biological
Sciences Curriculum Study (BSCS), a non-profit organization in
Colorado Springs,
Colorado that
develops
curriculum materials, provides professional development for the science-education
community, and conducts research and evaluation on curriculum reform. Prior
to joining BSCS, he was executive director of the National Research Council’s
Center for Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Education (CSMEE), in Washington,
D.C. Between 1992 and 1995, he was associate director of BSCS. From 1972 to
1985, he was professor of education at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota.
He
has been active in education for more than 30 years, having taught science
at the elementary, secondary, and college levels.
Program 4
Nancy Landes, Science TRACS, Biological Science Curriculum
Study
Nancy M. Landes, Ph.D., currently serves as the director
of the BSCS Center for Professional Development. She began her
professional career as a classroom
teacher,
grades 4 and 5, and completed a master of arts in curriculum and instruction
and a Ph.D. in science education at Michigan State University. She joined BSCS
in 1983. Since joining, Dr. Landes has served as the project director of two
major curriculum development projects—Science for Life and Living: Integrating
Science, Technology, and Health and BSCS Science T.R.A.C.S., both in elementary
science education. In her role as the director of the Center for Professional
Development at BSCS, Dr. Landes is the co-principal investigator of the SCI
Center, an NSF-funded high school implementation and dissemination center.
She has worked
with NSTA to develop inquiry-based professional development materials and strategies
within NSTA’s Building a Presence for Science program. Landes is particularly
interested in helping teachers make the connections between curriculum implementation,
professional development, and student learning and in establishing the conditions
that make possible the successful implementation of meaningful instructional
materials and strategies in science classrooms.
Program 5
Paul Williams, Exploring With Wisconsin Fast Plants, University
of Wisconsin
Listed above.
Program 6
Karen Worth, Insights, Education Development Center, Inc.
Karen Worth
has extensive experience in early childhood and elementary science
education. She worked as a curriculum and
staff developer for
both the Elementary
Science Study (ESS) and the African Primary Science Program at the Education
Development Center in the 1960s. More recently, she was the principal investigator
for the development of the Insights Curriculum. She also was principal investigator
for a system-wide science education reform effort in Cleveland, Ohio and works
as a consultant and advisor to many urban systemic reform efforts across the
country. She chaired the Working Group on Science Teaching Standards for the
National Science Education Standards effort of the National Academy of Science
and is currently co-principal investigator of the NSF-funded K-12 Science Curriculum
Dissemination Center at EDC and the Toolkit for Early Childhood Science Education.
She has also been a member of the Wheelock College faculty for over 30 years
where she teaches early childhood and elementary education courses at the graduate
level. She began her career in education as a teacher of young children in
New York City and Boston and continues to work closely with teachers and children
in classrooms.
Program 8
Tina Grotzer, The Understandings of Consequence Project,
Project Zero
Tina Grotzer is a research associate at Project Zero.
Her research focuses on topics at the intersection of cognition,
development, and educational practice,
such as the learnability of intelligence and how children develop causal models
for complex science concepts. She works with students and teachers in several
school systems on an ongoing basis, linking theory and practice such that they
inform one another. She has studied cognitive development both as a teacher
and
as a researcher. Tina is co-principal investigator on the Understandings of
Consequence Project, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The project
has identified
ways in which student explanations of scientific concepts have different forms
of causality at the core than those of scientists. She received her Ed.D. in
1993 and Ed.M. in 1985 from Harvard University and her A.B. in developmental
psychology from Vassar College in 1981.
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Scientists
Program 1
Gary Ruvkun, Ph.D.
Gary Ruvkun has been a professor of genetics at
the Harvard Medical School since 1985. Professor Ruvkun received
his Ph.D. in biophysics
from Harvard
University
in 1982. Dr. Ruvkun’s major research interests include neuroendocrine
control of metabolism and aging; temporal patterning during development, regulatory
RNAs,
genomics, neuroendocrine regulation of molting, regulation of fat deposition,
microbial diversity, and life on Mars. Over his career, Ruvkun has authored
or co-authored over 90 scientific papers and has maintained a lab and active
teaching
schedule at the Harvard Medical School. He has received myriad honors for his
work including, most recently, the 2001 National Institute of Health Merit
Award.
Program 2
Colleen M. Cavanaugh, Ph.D.
Dr. Colleen M. Cavanaugh is the Edward
C. Jeffrey Professor of Biology in the Department of Organismic
and Evolutionary Biology
at Harvard University. She
received both an M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1981 and 1985, respectively.
Professor Cavanaugh's continuing research interests include prokaryote-eukaryote
symbiosis, including its physiology, biochemistry, ecology, evolution, the
co-evolution of host and symbiont, and the physiology, molecular biology, ecology,
and evolution
of autotrophs and methanotrophs, as well as microbial cycling of inorganic
and organic compounds. In addition to her teaching responsibilities at Harvard,
Dr.
Cavanaugh she is a Visiting Investigator at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
and has ten deep-sea research cruises worldwide, and twelve deep-sea dives
on the submersible Alvin to her credit. She is the author or co-author of approximately
50 peer-reviewed scientific papers.
Program 3
Sigal Klipstein
Dr. Klipstein is a fellow in the Department of Obstetrics,
Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology at the Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center in Boston.
She has received
two fellowships, one in medical ethics at Harvard Medical School, and the other
in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Boston IVF and the Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center. Dr. Klipstein has lectured in both gynecology and
medical ethics at the Harvard Medical School, and has authored or co-authored
over 10
original articles. She is a member of the New England Fertility Society, the
American Society of Reproductive Medicine, and the Society of Reproductive
Endocrinology and Infertility.
Program 4
Judith Sumner
Judith Sumner is a botanist who specializes in flowering
plants, specifically their evolution, morphology, anatomy,
and adaptations. She has taught extensively
both at the college level and at botanical gardens. She served as education
director at Garden in the Woods (New England Wild Flower Society) until she
accepted her
present position at Assumption College in Worcester, where she is a member
of the natural sciences faculty. Sumner has published monographic studies in
the
American Journal of Botany, Pollen et Spores, and Allertonia. She monographed
two families for recently published volumes of Flora Vitiensis Nova. Her first
book, The Natural History of Medicinal Plants, was published in October 2000;
her second, Domestic Botany: The Natural History of Household Plants, is due
out in 2004.
Dan Scheirer, Ph.D.
Dan Scheirer is an associate professor of biology
and also directs the Electron Microscopy and Imaging Center at
Northeastern. A plant
biologist, Professor
Scheirer’s
research has focused on studying patterns of plant cell development with diverse
plants ranging from algae and mosses to flowering plants, including the plant
model organism, Arabidopsis thaliana. Scheirer is also a forensic botanist,
and applies plant cell and molecular biology to the resolution of legal questions.
A passionate teacher and classroom innovator, Scheirer teaches an introductory
biology course as well as higher-level courses in plant biology, plant development,
and electron microscopy. He has authored more than 50 scientific publications
as well as essays for college texts and student study guides.
Dan Cousins
Dan Cousins is the head grower at Wilson Farms in Lexington,
Massachusetts, where he oversees the operation of a one-acre,
fully computerized and automated
greenhouse.
Cousins earned his B.S. in Botany at the University of Texas. After graduating,
Cousins worked for five years in Texas as a commercial grower before being
hired to serve as a grower at Cornell University. While at Cornell, he also
taught
a course on interior plantscaping.
Program 5
Georgia Dunston, Ph.D.
Georgia Dunston is professor and chair of the
Department of Microbiology at Howard University College of Medicine,
and founding director
of the newly formed
National
Human Genome Center (NHGC) at Howard University. Her research on human genome
variation in disease susceptibility has been the vanguard of current efforts
at Howard University to build national and international research collaborations
focusing on the genetics of diseases common in African Americans and other
African Diaspora populations. Dr. Dunston is program director of the coordinating
center
for the Africa America Diabetes Mellitus Study, an international collaboration
to study the genetics of type 2 diabetes in ancestral populations of African
Americans, and the coordinating center for the African American Hereditary
Prostate Cancer Study Network, a national cooperative formed to map and characterize
genes
for prostate cancer in African Americans. The NHGC is instrumental in bringing
multicultural perspectives and resources to an understanding of knowledge gained
from the Human Genome Project and research on human genome variation.
Robert
Murray, Ph.D.
Robert Murray serves as professor of pediatrics
and medicine and chief of the Division of Medical Genetics in
the Department of
Pediatrics and Child Health
in the College of
Medicine at Howard Medical School. In addition, he is graduate professor and
chairman of the Graduate Department of Genetics and Human Genetics which offers
both M.S. and Ph.D. through the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, also
at Howard University. He has authored or co-authored more than 80 publications
including
four books; most recently, The Human Genome Project and the Future of Health
Care. Dr. Murray is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, a fellow and member of the board of directors of the Hastings Center,
a fellow of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and a
former member of its governing council. He has been a member of the Mammalian
Genetics
Study Section of the Division of Research Grants, NIH, the National Advisory
General Medical Sciences Council of NIGMS, NIH, and the Bioethics Advisory
Committee to the Secretary of DHEW 1979-81. He is a member of the American
Board of Internal
Medicine and the American Board of Medical Genetics.
Program 6
Jim Hanken, Ph.D.
James Hanken is the director of Harvard University’s
Museum of Comparative Zoology, where he also serves as the curator
of Herpatology. Additionally,
he serves as Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Department of Organismic
and Evolutionary Biology. Hanken earned his Ph.D. at Berkeley and then worked
on the faculty of Colorado State University for 16 years before coming to Harvard
in 1999. His research interests include evolutionary biology, especially development,
morphology, and systematics, and he works principally with amphibians. Professor
Hanken oversees research efforts in Sri Lanka, Africa, and South America, and
is currently engaged in his own fieldwork in Central America, where he is interested
in describing new species of salamander. In addition to his work as a biologist,
Professor Hanken as received awards for his nature and scientific photography.
Doug
Causey, Ph.D.
Douglas Causey is senior biologist at the Museum
of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, and serves as the
chief ornithologist
in the museum. He has authored
more than 120 articles and books on natural history, biodiversity, and ornithology,
and is actively engaged in research and public education. His research is focused
on the coevolution and natural history of avian viruses, tropical biodiversity,
and environmental security and sustainability. He has active research programs
in the United States, throughout the Arctic, and Central and South America.
At present, he is undertaking a broad-scale survey of birds and avian disease
pathogens
along migration pathways ranging from Arctic Siberia and Alaska to both coasts
of Costa Rica. He has been working for the past decade on various issues relating
to national and international environmental policy, and has published several
recent articles on environmental security and the conservation of forests and
biodiversity.
Program 7
Aaron Ellison, Ph.D.
Aaron M. Ellison is senior research fellow in
organismic and evolutionary biology at the Harvard Forest, and
adjunct professor
in the graduate program in organismic
and evolutionary biology at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He
received a B.A. in 1982 from Yale University, and a Ph.D. from Brown University
in 1986.
In 1992, during his tenure as the Marjorie Fisher Professor of Environmental
Studies at Mount Holyoke College, Dr. Ellison received the National Science
Foundation's Presidential Faculty Fellow award for "demonstrated excellence
and continued promise both in scientific and engineering research and in teaching
future generations
of students to extend and apply human knowledge." His research foci include:
food web dynamics, community ecology of wetlands and forests, evolutionary
ecology of carnivorous plants, and the application of Bayesian inference to
ecological
research and environmental decision-making.
Marianne Farrington, Ph.D.
Marianne Farrington is the Associate Director
of the Edgerton Research Laboratory at the New England Aquarium
in Boston, Massachusetts.
Dr. Farrington earned
a Ph.D. in Biochemistry at Pennsylvania State University in 1987, before going
on to Northeastern University to complete her post-doctorate work. In 1991,
she
joined the New England Aquarium's Edgerton Research laboratory. She began a
course of work that led to the analysis of juvenile groundfish bycatch survival
in Northwest
Atlantic Fisheries. While at the Aquarium, Dr. Farrington also taught human
genetics, biochemistry, molecular biology of the cell, as well as introductory
biology
courses through Northeastern University's division for returning adults, University
College.
Sanat Majumder, Ph.D.
Sanat Majumder is a professor emeritus of biology,
at Westfield State College. While active, Professor Majumder
taught a variety
of courses, including environmental
biology; population, food, and nutrition; and plant physiology. In addition
to teaching at Westfield State College, Professor Majumder taught at Smith
College
and St. Louis University. As a post-doctoral fellow, Majumder’s research
in radiation biology took him to Brookhaven National Laboratory and the University
of Hawaii in Honolulu. Professor Majumder has published a book, The Drama
of Man and Nature, as well as nearly 30 scientific papers. A native of India,
Professor Majumder currently resides in Northampton, Massachusetts.
Les Kaufman,
Ph.D.
Les Kaufman is an associate professor of biology at Boston University.
He also is a fellow at the Harvard University Museum of Comparative
Zoology
and a research
scholar at the New England Aquarium. Professor Kaufman earned his Ph.D. at
John Hopkins in theoretical ecology and evolutionary biology in 1980. His
research is in evolutionary ecology and applied research in marine conservation
biology,
where his focus is on various fish ecologies. In 1997, Professor Kaufman
started a research and graduate training effort to encourage a switch from
classical
fisheries to ecosystem-based marine resource management. The project is active
in New England, East Africa, Florida, California, and the tropical Pacific
and
Atlantic Oceans, and is also engaged with the New England Fishery Management
Council and the California Department of Fish and Game.
Program 8
Adrien Finzi, Ph.D.
Adrien Finzi is an assistant professor in Boston
University biology department. Professor Finzi earned his Ph.D.
in 1996 at the University
of Connecticut.
His research interests include forest ecology, terrestrial biogeochemistry,
and global
change biology. Currently, his focus is in terrestrial biogeochemistry and
global change biology. Specifically, he is investigating the effect of free-air
CO2
enrichment on Carbon-storage and nutrient cycling in a southern pine-hardwood
forest. Professor Finzi is author or co-author on more than ten scientific
papers.
Charles Tyler
In 1989, Charles Tyler started work at the Professional
Services Group, Inc. as an operations specialist on the Boston
Harbor Project
(BHP), where he
contributed to operational planning and operational review and input to the
conceptual
and detailed design of the 1.27 billion-gallon-per-day wastewater facility
on Deer
Island. After working for over five years with the construction management
firm on the BHP, Tyler "jumped the fence" and joined the Massachusetts
Water Resources Authority as a project manager in the process group, a group
of specialists
who focused on punchlisting and construction turnover, and start-up of the
newly-constructed facilities on Deer Island. Tyler, who began his career
in wastewater operations
in 1977, now works on operations and maintenance with technical and process
issues in Deer Island’s effort to keep the huge facility operating
optimally.
Nicky Sheats, Ph.D.
Dr. Sheats received his Ph.D. in the department
of earth and planetary sciences at Harvard University in 2000,
where his field
of study was biological oceanography
with a focus in stable isotope biogeochemistry. His doctoral dissertation
focused on determining if sewage nitrogen was being incorporated into
the food webs
of the Delaware River Estuary and Massachusetts Bay. Currently Dr. Sheats
is researching
urban air pollution as a post-doctoral fellow at the Earth Institute
at Columbia University.
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