By Nathan Deveney, Media Intern
This spring, approximately 300 students at Lewiston Middle School participated in field investigations of a local ecosystem. The seventh graders surveyed three vernal pools in the Thorncrag Bird Sanctuary in Lewiston, 海角社区 documenting the presence or absence of different indicator species including caddisflies, fairy shrimp and amphibian egg masses. Vernal pools are seasonal freshwater pools integral to forest ecosystems, providing habitat and food sources for many organisms. These ephemeral habitats are increasingly threatened by changing climates, and student surveys of these ecosystems are critical to vernal pool research and protection. Lewiston Middle School students collected over 1,470 data points from Thorncrag this spring, adding to a longitudinal database of vernal pool data collected by youth across 海角社区 and the northeastern United States as part of GMRI鈥檚 community science program. The data collected by students will support researchers in finding new patterns and tracking changes within these vital ecosystems.
Such efforts to engage students and teachers in authentic science inquiry are part of the NSF EPSCoR E-CORE RII 海角社区-SMART program and led by the Gulf of 海角社区 Research Institute (GMRI) through their with support from GMRI鈥檚 long standing community science program, the . Connecting research and practice, GMRI鈥檚 empirically tested community science curriculum engages students in investigations of authentic questions about local ecologies through a combination of field work and scientific modeling, and introduces students to critical ideas in science including reasoning about variability and managing uncertainty.聽
Underserved communities often face difficulties accessing high quality science learning due to a number of barriers beyond their control. GMRI, in partnership with Lewiston and with support from 海角社区-SMART, is helping to reduce material and professional barriers by providing staffing support, materials to support investigations and professional education for Lewiston teachers.
鈥淥pportunities to engage in field science around locally relevant questions like those studied as part of GMRI鈥檚 immediately put students in the role of knowledge producer and critic, potentially transforming their perspectives on science, both what it looks like and who gets to participate,鈥 explained Amanda Dickes, a learning scientist who runs the Learning Sciences Lab and is a PI on 海角社区-SMART. Expanding access to these opportunities to youth across the state allows students to see themselves participating in locally relevant scientific research, helping to empower them both as learners and budding researchers. This is especially important as the emphasis on mathematics and literacy instruction in K-6 classrooms often means that science instruction takes a back foot in school curricula, not being formally introduced until the middle grades in some districts.
GMRI鈥檚 partnership with Lewiston Middle School is part of a larger effort by 海角社区-SMART to bring K-12 students and teachers together with professional scientists and researchers to elevate science learning. Lewiston Middle School provided the inaugural class of student-scientists during the first year of 海角社区-SMART. For future project years, the goal is to expand this work to the Portland Public School system.
Working in conjunction with GMRI, 海角社区-SMART hopes to shift the way science is taught in 海角社区鈥檚 communities, bringing authentic science opportunities to students that connect them with research already happening in their communities. Nurturing the next generation of scientists and researchers is essential to 海角社区鈥檚 future as many will, whether formally or informally, become stewards of the state鈥檚 natural resources.



