On Friday, June 10th, Judy O’Neil and I participated in the second annual Billion Oyster Projects Curriculum and Community Enterprise for Restoration Science (BOP CCERS) – Science, Technology, Engineering and Math education (STAM) Research Symposium on Governors Island. This event was similar to the inaugural event of June 2015, however this year included the new […]
On Friday, June 10th, Judy O’Neil and I participated in the second annual Billion Oyster Projects Curriculum and Community Enterprise for Restoration Science (BOP CCERS) – Science, Technology, Engineering and Math education (STAM) Research Symposium on Governors Island. This event was similar to the inaugural event of June 2015, however this year included the new cohort of middle school students, an updated oyster musical, and a student scavenger hunt which kept things fun and interesting for project partners and students alike. The weather was an ideal sunny and balmy 76 degrees, allowing students to enjoy their time at many different stations around the island.
A few photos of the island taken before students arrived. Credit: Dylan Taillie
Judy and I arrived on historic and scenic Governors Island at around 9:30 on Friday morning. Catching an early ferry allowed us to have a little bit of down time before setting up our station at the Admiral’s House for the research symposium. I snapped these photos of the Admiral’s House, NYC skyline and entrance to Governors Island while we were having our take-away breakfast on the island.
Photos of students arriving on the Governors Island Ferry and of Sam Janis going through the days plans in front of the admirals house credit: Dylan Taillie
Students arrived around 10am to set up their research projects at the Admiral’s House. Sam Janis – Project Manager on the BOP-CCERS project – introduced students to the STEM Symposium and gave them a run down of the day’s planned events.
The shell Recycling Station is one part of the five stages of the Billion Oyster Project life cycle (Left) . A teacher helps his students identify critters that can be found in New York Harbor (Right). Credit: Dylan Taillie
Throughout the day students rotated between four stations – the research STEM Symposium projects (at the Admiral’s House where Judy and I were set up), the shell pile and oyster reef, the ‘yellow-house’ that contained marine organisms for students to identify, and finally the National Park site, Fort Jay, for a little history lesson about Governors Island and the War of 1812. Judy and I remained at our station at the Admiral’s House in order to help students design conceptual diagrams as a science communication activity.
Students crowded around our “diagram creation station” to create their visions for the harbor and also to complete the days scavenger hunt activity. Credit: Dylan Taillie
Students used a New York Harbor centric symbol library to create their vision of a healthy versus an unhealthy New York Harbor. Students were able to clearly picture inputs such as sewage and nutrients, as well as visualize what a clean harbor would look like with oyster reefs and restoration initiatives.
Students from New York Harbor school model their old school diving equipment. Students at this unique school have the opportunity to obtain a diving certification (Top left). Architects explain a diagram of planned environmental development entitled “Building Coastal Resiliency” (Top right). Student Janine smiles next to her project entitled “Better Future, Better NYC!” (Bottom left). Students hold up a model of the foliage found in the area of NYC that they live in (Bottom center). Student Isaiah holds up a rodents femur bone, Isaiah explained his study looking at owl pellets found that they mainly forage on rodents (Bottom right). Credit: Judy O’Neil and Dylan Taillie
Students from middle schools around New York City, New York Harbor School students, and representatives from environmental organizations all presented projects at the symposium. These photos are just a snippet of the many projects that Judy and I read about as we walked around the house.
Only the bravest of students slurped slimy oysters out of these shells. Credit: Dylan Taillie
At lunch, students learned to shuck oysters and those who dared even had one or two raw oysters on the half shell. The students learned that eating oysters was ok as long as the shells make it back in the harbor to provide substrate for other oysters to grow on.
Students kept their eyes glued during Paul Greenberg’s keynote speech as well as throughout the funny and inspiring musical, “Salty Folk”. Credit: Dylan Taillie
After lunch all students gathered at the beach club and kept their eyes glued to the stage as Paul Greenberg (renowned environmental author of Four Fish and American Catch) gave an inspiring keynote speech about environmentalism and Superhero Clubhouse performers presented their original musical number, “Salty Folk”. This musical piece tells the story ofa restoration scientist who sets down one optimistic oyster in NY Harbor who then meets a bunch of unenthused, pessimistic oysters who believe the Harbor will never be clean again. Slowly the new oyster changes the old oysters’ minds and convinces them to open their shells and clean the harbor water with her – allowing the return of all sorts of critters like blue crabs and Atlantic menhaden. The musical was fun, gave a short history of the Harbor’s degradation, the historical use of oysters, and drove home the point that each oyster (and each environmental advocate) can make a big difference when they work together.
Tired but happy students smile while looking at Governors Island off the back of the ferry after a full day of STEM learning.