iSWOOP Designs (2017)
Description
From designing professional development for park rangers to designing visuals with scientists to engage the public, the iSWOOP project team of Hristov, Allen, and Merson is committed to compelling visualizations that spark interest, interactive learning experiences, and fostering curiosity. iSWOOP partners, park rangers and scientists seek to answer the questions, How do we know what we know — about frog, bats, rocks, and plants over time? During the next three years, several parks will adapt and adopt the iSWOOP approach to communicating science with public audiences. If you visit a national park, ask about the science that is going on behind the scenes. With gratitude to the National Park Service staff for their assistance, spirit of experimentation, and dedication to public service.
NSF Awards: 1514776
Also, has climate change increased in importance as a theme in what the scientists at NPS want to talk about?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wTIyihmp-w
Anyway, I remember Rulon being a bit hesitant to leave so much time for visitors’ questions and when he did, he was impressed by the sophistication of the questions and he seemed completely sold on taking an approach that set visitors up with some information and then allowed them to speculate, observe, and predict.
At Indiana Dunes a ranger organized a series of programs, Science Saturdays and each one had a hands-on exploratory component.
After spending more than $700,000 for the salt-sprayed vacation homes, the federal government plans to promptly tear them down and turn the area into a public beach access.
The move marks a unique and possibly groundbreaking chapter in the deepening dilemma of what to do with imperiled coastal homes, which are becoming only more vulnerable amid rising seas, more intense storms and unceasing erosion.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/10/16/obx-rodanthe-house-collapse-ocean-bought/