DigitalOcean engages middle and high school students in 200 classrooms around the world in monitoring, analyzing, and sharing information about the declining global fish population that, in its implications for humans and the ecosystem, dwarfs other food issues in our time. DigitalOcean uses multi-disciplinary teams of students, scientists, and new media experts, partnering with Google Ocean, NASA GLOBE, and ePals, to engage the next generation of consumers in a global dialogue on the interrelationships among local human customs, regulatory laws, fishing practices, wildlife management, and the future of the sea.
Project URL : http://www.cftnm.ucsb.edu/DO/SamplingtheSea/Graduate Student Research (GSR) DO: Sampling the Sea
Co-PI, DO/Sampling the Sea
Research Director
Professor of Film and Media Studies/Co-Director of Carsey-Wolf Center for Film, Television, and New Media
Associate Director, Carsey-Wolf Center for Film, Television, and New Media, UC Santa Barbara
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Posted on Oct 13, 2009-07:55pm by brucecaron
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One-fifth of the protein humans consume comes from the sea. This critical ecosystem is at risk. Global seafood catch has declined for two decades while human populations grow exponentially. The pending global crisis dwarfs other food issues, yet oceans garner little attention. Most people are too removed from the sea in their daily lives to understand that crises exist; hence, the demand for sustainable solutions is limited. DigitalOcean: Sampling the Sea will build a foundation for solutions using online collaborative technologies to create awareness among students about the need to preserve ocean resources. A multi-disciplinary team from UC Santa Barbara, in partnership with Google Earth, NASA Globe, and ePals, will reach 200 classrooms, involving 3,500 students from multiple countries, in the first year. By integrating social networks of students/teachers collecting data, images, and stories about seafood in their local communities with interactive, animated displays of scientific content about trends in fisheries and ocean species in Google Earth, students will learn about sustainable seafood choices and effects of human actions on the ocean. By “Sampling the Sea,” students will actively participate in research, contribute knowledge, and foster a global discussion of how the oceans are changing, how our choices drive those changes, and possible solutions.
Presenters: Bruce Caron and Constance Penley
Posted on Oct 08, 2009-10:38am by jaredlamenzo
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Hi all,
I am trying to develop a strategy to make the scientific data students' collect as open as possible. I am looking into the Creative Commons CC0 license for the bird and wildlife sightings--have you all thought about a strategy? Maybe we could discuss this. Hope your project is going well!
Best,
Jared Lamenzo (WildLab)
Posted on Oct 13, 2009-07:56pm by brucecaron
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We are storng supporters of CC licensing for photos. CCLearn will work with you to integrate licensing into your project.
Posted on Sep 10, 2009-07:42pm by brucecaron
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Here is the FLickr Site for Sampling the Sea