ed43c-0740: river-based experiential learning the bear river fellows program dr. david e. rosenberg...
TRANSCRIPT
ED43C-0740: River-Based Experiential Learning
The Bear River Fellows ProgramDr. David E. Rosenberg
Brian Shirley, M.S., Dr. Mark F. Roark
Michael Adamson, Russell Babb, Liisa Piiparinen,
Sarah Stander, Erika Tillman, Ayman AlAfifi
AbstractThe Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Outdoor Recreation, and Parks and Recreation programs at Utah State University (USU) have partnered to offer a new, unique river-based experiential learning opportunity for undergraduates called the Bear River Fellows Program. Incoming freshmen Fellows experience a river first hand during a 5-day/4-night river trip on the nearby Bear River two weeks before the start of their first Fall semester. Fellows navigate the Bear River in canoes, camp along the banks, interact with local water and environmental managers, collect channel cross section, stream flow, vegetation cover, and topological complexity data, meet other incoming freshmen, interact with faculty and graduate students, develop boating and leadership skills, problem solve, and participate as full members of the research team. Subsequently, we pay Fellows as undergraduate researchers during their Fall and Spring Freshman semesters to analyze, synthesize, and present the field data collected. The program supports a larger National Science Foundation environmental modeling and management project for the lower Bear River, Utah.
1. Program Goals•Undertake environmental and water research on a nearby river
•Experience the river first hand on a multi-day trip
•Meet other incoming freshmen
• Interact with faculty & grad students
• Develop data collection, analysis, boating, and leadership skills
• Get paid to work with collected field data through the subsequent Fall and Spring semesters
2. Program Timeline
3. Lower Bear River Study Site
• Bear River basin spans three states
• Headwaters in Utah and Wyoming; river outlet is the Great Salt Lake
• Study area for 5-day August, 2012 trip shown in thick blue.
• Pink box and map show three monitoring sites established near the Bear-Cub River confluence
4. Preliminary Outcomes
Data CollectedResearch Questions
Fellows want to Answer
• River flow, stage, cross section topology, and bank vegetation at 3 sites
• Water withdrawals, return flows, beaver activity, and temperature along the study reach
1. How does vegetation differ from cross-section to cross-section?*
2. How does water stage relate to water flow at our study sites?
3. What causes reverse flows at the Cub River outlet?*
4. How do people divert water from/discharge to the river?
5. What are beavers doing on the lower Bear River?*
6. How can we take this information to other people?*
*new questions beyond original proposal
New Skills Learned• How to use an acoustic Doppler
current profiler, level, and rod• How to set up transects,
benchmarks• How to look at vegetation• Paddling canoe• Measuring flow and moving
around in the water• New knots, canoeing things, and
many outdoor things• How to be a canoe rudder (sit in
the back)• Feathering = new term for
ferrying [the canoe across the river]The Trip in One WordNutella (means Awesome), Party-barge, Excellent, Learning, SHOWER!!, Strength, Paddling, Teamwork, Bonding, Oreos,
Teaching, Endurance, …
5. Work Plan for 2013• Continue to process, analyze, and synthesize collected data
• Repeat flow and stage measurements at sites in Spring
• Present results at undergraduate research forums in March and April
• Undertake another river trip in August 2013 with a new cohort of Fellows
6. Contact InformationDr. David E. Rosenberg
Program DirectorUtah State University
Email: [email protected]
http://bearriverfellows.usu.edu/
Date Activity2012 May 15 Program announced
June 11 Applications due
June 22 Fellows notified
Aug 14–18 River trip
Sep – Dec Data analysis, day trips
2013 Jan – May Data analysis, day trips
Apr – May Present results
A.
B.
F.
D.C.
A. Surveying channel topologyB. Measuring river flow and C. StageD. Visit to camp by land managersE. Paddling to a site; F. Party barge
break!
B. E.
CAREER #1149297