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Date: Fri 26-Apr-1996

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Date: Fri 26-Apr-1996

Publication: Bee

Author: STEVEB

Quick Words:

JASON-Project-Norwalk

Full Text:

with cuts: JASON Project Takes Students Beneath The Sea

B Y S TEVE B IGHAM

Dozens of Newtown students took an "electronic field trip" to the Florida Keys

earlier this week to join scientists in an in-depth study of sharks,

crocodiles and coral reefs.

As part of the seventh annual JASON Project, Head O' Meadow School fourth

graders, Middle Gate School fifth graders and Discovery students from the

middle school hooked up live via satellite with researchers about 20 miles off

the coast of Florida, including one scuba diver who fielded questions from the

ocean floor as fish swam in front of his face.

"I couldn't believe a man was talking to us live under the water like that,"

said Head O' Meadow fourth grader Mat Miller.

Students got to observe all of this while sitting in the comfortable

surroundings of the Crown SoNo Regent Cinema, just down the road from the

Maritime Center at Norwalk, the host of the program.

This year's expedition, entitled "Adapting to a Changing Sea," looks at the

impact of human development on life at the edge of the sea. The JASON

scientists are examining how nature adjusts as human populations grow in

coastal areas and as technological advances make possible dramatic changes to

the environment.

Headed by Dr Robert Ballard, the discoverer of the Titanic, oceanographers are

using remotely operated vehicles and manned submersibles to map ancient coral

reefs, study the sensory abilities of sharks and check up on the endangered

American crocodile.

At the Maritime Center, students also observed special JASON-related displays

set up throughout the aquarium.

This year for the first time, the JASON Project hooked up with students,

parents and teachers via the World Wide Web, allowing schools to gain a better

understanding of what scientists are researching.

"The fifth graders at Middle Gate have been involved with the JASON Project

since the first of December. They're very aware of what's going on," explained

Jackie Carson, Middle Gate School's K-5 science/math coordinator.

Middle Gate has actually played a direct role in the JASON Project as well,

conducting field tests at the Pootatuck River and sending its findings on to

Dr Ballard and his researchers over the internet.

Fourth graders from Middle Gate School visited the Maritime Center two years

ago when the JASON Project explored the rain forests of Belize.

According to David Sigworth of the Maritime Center, students often get to

control certain equipment at the exhibition from their site, possibly 2,000

miles away.

The JASON Project is produced by the JASON Foundation for Education in

Waltham, Mass. Past expeditions have explored the Galapagos Islands, Mexico's

Sea of Cortez and the volcanoes of Hawaii.

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