| The
Cornell Biological Field Station (CBFS) program is internationally
recognized for its contributions to the understanding of Great Lakes
food webs and is a primary research site for field and experimental
aquatic research at Cornell University. Education through the training
of graduate and undergraduate students is a primary mission of the
CBFS program, including the training of future Great Lakes scientists
(both MS and PhD). Laboratory and classroom space, improved on-site
living quarters, state-of-theart field and laboratory equipment,
access by students to real time environmental Great Lakes data through
remotely set buoys and acoustic gear, and opportunities for distance
learning are required to meet current and future educational demands
and needs. Bringing Great Lakes ecology to the classroom and involving
primary and secondary students using state-of-the-art technology
is a CBFS program desire that would promote respect for Great Lakes
resources through knowledge.
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Our
future: Elementary public
school students learning
about freshwater ecology
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- Advance
communication technology including networking of research and
housing units.
Equip classroom with laboratory equipment, computers, sinks, and
classroom furniture.
- Purchase
and install equipment for distance learning for outreach and training
of college students.
- Renovate
on-site student housing. Some housing units have not been upgraded
since the 1960s.
- Hire
an outreach specialist that would extend Great Lakes science and
ecology to teachers and students in primary and secondary public
schools.
- Purchase
accessory equipment for communication and networking with local
public schools.
- Provide
students (primary and secondary students in public schools and
college students) with access to real time environmental data
collected from remotely operated buoys in Lake Ontario and Oneida
Lake.
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Undergraduate intern acquiring
research experience |