National Association of Geoscience Teachers Pacific Northwest Section Winter 2007 President Ralph Dawes, Earth Sciences Department. In this Issue: Wenatchee Valley College 1300 Fifth Street , Wenatchee, WA 98801 Crisis in Washington (D.C. & State!):
[email protected] Global Warming Education Vice President 2007 PNW NAGT Annual Meeting, Portland Ron Metzger And more! Southwestern Oregon Community College 1988 Newmark Avenue, Coos Bay, OR 97420
[email protected] Secretary/Treasurer Robert Christman Department of Geology Western Washington University From the President Bellingham, WA 98225
[email protected] Newsletter Editor Cassandra Strickland Yakima Valley Community College Do you teach climate change? It is a topic that spans 500 W. Main, Grandview, WA 98930
[email protected] disciplines in earth science education and is taught in many classes. Climate change State Councilors comes up in physical and historical geology textbooks in the glaciers and ice ages AK Cathy Connor, Univ. of Alaska chapters and it comes up in meteorology classes when climate is the topic. It comes up Southeast, Juneau in the news media just about every day, usually referred to as global warming and
[email protected] Michael Collins couched in terms of climate change today and tomorrow. News articles tend to focus
[email protected] on how climate change affects, or is affected by, people. Most students have thus been ID Shawn Willsey, exposed to the topic and may already have opinions about it. This exposure makes College of Southern Idaho
[email protected] climate change an extended “teaching moment,” a rich opportunity to build from OR Joe Graf topical interest to deeper understanding of science.