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Important reminders
15th July 2002:
Deadline for booking Friday Field Trips
9th July 2002:
Deadline for booking Sunday Field Trips
30th June 2002:
Deadline for all registration
24th June 2002:
Deadline for PowerPoint submission
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There will be three workshops during the meeting:
1. Common Ground in Conservation Outreach
Tuesday 16 July from 12.30 to 13.30
Keynes Lecture Theatre 2
Workshop Leaders:
Chris Pyke, Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara,
Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA <pyke@geog.ucsb.edu>
Britta Bierwagen, Outreach Coordinator, National Center for Ecological Analysis and
Synthesis, Santa Barbara, CA, USA <britta@nceas.ucsb.edu>
We will discuss the results of our first year of implementing a new conservation
education project. This project emphasises the common themes connecting conservation
issues faced by people in difference places. The goal of the workshop is to increase
international participation in a conservation education programme that introduces
students in grades 3-12 to both local and global threats to biological diversity.
The framework of our Common Ground in Conservation (CGC) project is designed to foster
communication and dialogue between both students and scientists, while respecting
ubiquitous constraints of time and resources for both teachers and scientists. The
workshop will provide an opportunity to discuss the progress of the project to date,
including results from the first set of partner schools. The workshop will inform
members about opportunities for participation either individually or with their local
SCB chapters.
The workshop will comprise:
- Strategies for outreach and education in primary and secondary grades and the
rationale for the CGC project: Chris Pyke
- Review of completed and on-going Common Ground partner school activities: Britta
Bierwagen
- Reports from partner scientists in California, Idaho, and Montana, USA
- Discussion of programme successes and areas of improvement, and opportunities
for future collaboration
2. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment: the stage is set and the audience is waiting
Tuesday 16 July from 12.30 to 13.30
Keynes Lecture Theatre 3
Workshop Leader:
Neville Ash, Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Secretariat, UNEP-WCMC, 219 Huntingdon
Road, Cambridge, CB3 0DL, UK. <ash@millenniumassessment.org>
This workshop aims to introduce and present progress of the MA to SCB meeting
participants, to provide the opportunity for questions and feedback, and to facilitate
discussion of engagement opportunities in the MA process.
The Millennium Assessment (MA) is a four-year process designed to improve the management
of the world's natural and managed ecosystems by helping to meet the needs of decision-makers
and the public for peer-reviewed, policy-relevant scientific information on the condition
of ecosystems, consequences of ecosystem change, and options for response. The Convention
on Biological Diversity, Convention to Combat Desertification, and Convention on
Wetlands (Ramsar) have all endorsed the MA as a joint assessment process to meet
some of their information needs. The MA will also address needs of the private sector
and civil society. The MA will be conducted through working groups comprised of technical
experts from around the world, and is a "multi-scale" assessment –comprised
of a global component as well as a number of sub-global assessments being carried
out at regional, national, and local scales around the world.
Further background to the MA can be found at: www.millenniumassessment.org
3. Teaching Conservation Biology: Challenges and Best Practices
Wednesday 17 July from 12.30 to 13.30
Keynes Lecture Theatre 2
Workshop Leaders:
Eleanor Sterling, Melina Laverty, Ian Harrison, Center for Biodiversity and Conservation,
American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79th St, New York, NY 10024,
USA, <sterling@amnh>, <laverty@amnh.org>, <harrison@amnh.org>
Mac Hunter, Department of Wildlife Ecology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine 04469-5755
USA.
This roundtable discussion, organised in part by the Society for Conservation Biology
Education Committee, will explore challenges and best practices in teaching conservation
biology. Topics for discussion will include: designing capstone courses, developing
multi-disciplinary teaching tools, building critical thinking skills in students,
and linking conservation practitioners with educators. Participants will have the
opportunity to share their own experiences, including successes and obstacles, and
discuss collaborative efforts to improve conservation biology teaching in the future.
We encourage educators, university professors, and conservation professionals from
around the world who would like to encourage practical and applied learning in Conservation
Biology courses to join the discussion.
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