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NOAA's NWS Focus
July
7, 2003 |
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| Brad
Colman (left) and Nick Bond (right), together
with two camp volunteers, inflate a weather
balloon launched as part of a recent science
camp held for middle school students in the
Seattle, WA, area recently. Colman is the Science
and Operations Officer at the Seattle Weather
Forecast Office, and Bond is a meteorologist
with NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory.
Read the story here.
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| Internet
2 Allows Iowa Meteorologist to Meet with Students in Michigan
Weather Forecast
Office Des Moines Senior Meteorologist Brad Small participated
in a video conference on June 9, 2003, with Kindergarten
through 5th grade students to discuss meteorology
and careers in the National Weather Service. This
event was unique because Small was in Iowa, while
the students were at their school in Michigan.
The technology
of Internet 2 and the Iowa
Communications Network (ICN) allowed Small to interact
with the students and answer their questions in real time.
This was the first use of Internet 2 for Iowa Public Television's
(IPTV) School to
Careers program, and the National Weather Service in
Des Moines.
Internet
2 is a not-for-profit consortium led by over 200 U.S.
universities, which is accelerating the creation of a next
generation Internet employing new technologies and capabilities.
Several times
a year Small uses the ICN fiber optics network to talk to
students of all ages about meteorology and careers in the
National Weather Service through IPTV's School to Careers
program. Small said, "We conduct interactive videoconferences
using IPTV's equipment reaching several schools, and potentially
hundreds of students, all at the same time. IPTV was exploring
bridging the ICN to Internet 2 and reaching students who
don't have ICN access. The school from Michigan has an Internet
2 connection and showed an interest in meteorology."
"Talking to
students about meteorology and the National Weather Service
through Iowa Public Television's School to Careers program
is always fun and rewarding," said Small. "The students
are curious about the weather and we never seem to have
enough time to answer all their questions. This experience
was even more exciting because it was our first use of Internet
2 technology and opens the door for National Weather Service
staff to conduct real-time video conferencing with students
nationwide."
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| Forecast
Office Participates in First NOAA Science Camp for Seattle
Middle Schoolers
Middle-school-age
children in Seattle, WA, got hands-on science experience with
scientists at the NOAA's Sand Point facility during the agency's
first science camp for kids June 23-27, 2003. The pilot project
was the brainchild of Lt. Cmdr. Thomas Callahan, NOAA Corps,
science coordinator with NOAA's Office of Response and Restoration,
National Ocean Service, in Seattle. NOAA Administrator Vice
Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr. (USN, Ret.), provided $15,000
in a special outreach grant to fund the project. Two educational
coordinators and three middle school science teachers worked
with the NOAA scientists, including staff from the NWS Weather
Forecast Office (WFO) Seattle, WA, to develop age-appropriate
projects and activities; two additional teachers served as
camp counselors. The camp was free to the 100 children, ages
10-12, who attended.
The WFO staff in Seattle offered students an opportunity
to learn about forecasting the weather as one of the topics
during the week. Other topics included exploring the oceans,
protecting salmon and sea lions, restoring marine environments,
and charting shipwrecks and the sea floor. On the last day
of camp, the kids conducted a "research cruise" with vessels
constructed from cardboard boxes. This final activity challenged
them to work together to complete their cruise and use what
they learned during the week.
WFO Seattle Meteorologist-In-Charge Chris Hill said his
staff created a slide show about the NWS mission, that emphasized
forecast and warning programs and atmospheric observations.
Students also helped inflate a weather balloon and the campers
released the balloon for all the students to watch and learn
about wind measurements aloft. "We
highlighted how NWS works with our partners to achieve our
mission, new digital forecasts, and where to obtain NWS
products and services including the Internet and NOAA Weather
Radio. We also discussed Washington state weather hazards
and showed our award winning Washington weather hazards
video," said Hill.
Warning Coordination
Meteorologist Ted Buehner said, "The teachers and NOAA support
staff informed us that our presentation was well received.
The kids buzzed over the weather action video and balloon
inflation and launch." Callahan added, "We wanted to show
kids what NOAA is all about and how NOAA science affects
their lives, whether through protecting the coastal zones
and marine life, providing daily weather forecasts, or managing
the local fisheries. They learned that scientists are 'real'
people, and that science can be fun and exciting. What better
way to recruit future NOAA scientists!"
The science
camp supports NOAA's environmental literacy, outreach, and
education priority for the 21st century, under the NOAA
Strategic Plan.
"We hope to
offer the camp each year in Seattle, as well as in other
areas of the country that have a number of NOAA facilities
and scientists," Callahan said. "How well we did this year
may help determine how quickly we achieve that goal."
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| Training
Center's Bob Hamilton Helps WMO Train Africans in Upper
Air Observations
Robert S. Hamilton,
meteorologist/master instructor at the NWS Training Center
in Kansas City, MO, spent a week in Botswana, Africa, recently
to help the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) provide
training in upper air observations. Other than suffering 18
hours of discomfort from jamming his 6-foot, 3-inch frame
into an airplane seat for the two flights, Hamilton said the
experience was educational and rewarding.
"I
would love to go back and do some more training for the
entire Region 1 [Africa]," Hamilton said, "but I don't
know if that will happen."
Hamilton was
chosen to participate in the April 7-11, 2003, "Training
Workshop on Upper Air Observations" organized by the WMO
in Gaborone, Botswana. About 45 English-speaking residents
of 20 countries in Africa participated in the workshop.
Countries represented included Egypt, Kenya, Mozambique,
Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
The WMO organized
the workshop to allow participants to compare and contrast
various methods of obtaining weather observations and identify
correctable problems. Many of the countries, Hamilton said,
lack training and finances to keep upper air programs in
operation. Almost all have only one balloon launch each
day and some still use a manual method to take upper air
observations.
"There is a
huge problem with safety procedures when dealing with hydrogen,"
Hamilton said, "and many of the countries have persistent
breakdowns with their hydrogen generators. Some countries
have no way to communicate their observation data to the
outside world and the instability in some countries compounds
their difficulties."
Hamilton's
appointment to the WMO's "Expert Team on Training Activities
and Training Materials" might lead him back to Africa
to provide more assistance. The people of the region
are friendly,
helpful, and eager to learn, he added. "I'd look forward
to another trip."
Gaborone is
a European-type small town where motorists drive very
fast
on the left side of the road, according to Hamilton. Restaurant
menus were similar to those in any U.S. city, but the
food left him hungry for juicy Kansas City strip steaks.
The biggest
contrast between Botswana and the United States Hamilton
noted was the lack of industrialization.
"Instead of
trying to do more work with fewer people or with a machine,"
he said, "they had a lot of people doing work that a single
machine could do. For example, they had crews of 20-30 people
sweeping the streets instead of using a street sweeper.
The other thing I noticed the times we had a chance to get
around town was that everyone, and I mean everyone, had
a cell phone."
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| Employee
Milestones
- Click
here to see NEW APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through
June 30, 2003.
- Click
here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES from NWS through
June 30, 2003.
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| Also
On the Web...White Water Rafters Find Use for AHPS
An inquiry by
a white water rafter to the Pueblo, CO, Weather Forecast Office
gave Service Hydrologist Larry Walrod an opportunity to introduce
the Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service (AHPS) to another
user community. Read about it by
clicking here.
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| Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report
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Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted
in the latest issue of AccessNOAA
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| Send
questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov
or mail to:
National Weather
Service
Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
1325 East West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3283
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