
PRESS RELEASE
First
Hand Learning to Develop Mentoring Program For City Kids
Grant will provide funds for the development of an innovative after-school
science program for young adolescents.
(April 20, 2005 – Buffalo, NY) First Hand Learning, Inc. (FHL) announced
today the receipt of a five-year, $1.5 million grant from the National
Science Foundation to develop a national model for an after-school science
program based in Community Centers that pairs urban adolescents with adult
mentors. The goal of the project, named Science Firsthand, is to inspire
urban youth to pursue careers in the sciences and science-related occupations.
The project is a partnership between First Hand Learning, the St. Louis
Science Center, and the National Wildlife Federation. William Rogers,
FHL’s Director of Out of School Programs, will head the project
in collaboration with Diane Miller, Director of Public and Community Programs
at the St. Louis Science Center. Based on a program first pioneered by
the Buffalo Zoo and the Buffalo Public Schools, the project will support
youth and adult partners in the pursuit of collaborative science investigations
under the guidance of professional scientists.
“We are thrilled to have this opportunity to build a national network
of community-based organizations and informal science institutions that
will offer rich science learning opportunities to urban adolescents,”
stated First Hand Learning president Peter Dow. “Last year, we worked
with the Zoo’s Education Staff and the Zoo Magnet School faculty
as participants in a science mentoring program for 7th and 8th grade students.
When we saw how engaged students became in science during the Zoo program,
we thought that science-focused mentoring programs housed in community-based
organizations would fly in other cities. The NSF apparently agreed.”
Science Firsthand will be developed in Buffalo in collaboration with the
Bob Lanier Center, The Bridge To Building Community, Fillmore-Leroy Area
Residents Association, the Gloria J. Parks Community Center, the Matt
Urban Center, the Parkside Community Association, and the Valley Community
Center. Following the pilot development phase in Buffalo and St. Louis
the project will be field tested in Newark, Detroit, and Seattle. The
National Wildlife Federation will play a major role in national distribution.
The project will be guided by a National Advisory Committee of science
educators chaired by Karen Worth of Wheelock College. An Advisory Committee
of local scientists will be chaired by Zoo President Dr. Donna Fernandes.
In addition to Fernandes, several local scientists have agreed to serve
as advisors including psychologist Dr. Lisa Brooks of Buffalo State College,
biologists Dr. Michael Noonan and Dr. Sara Morris of Canisius College,
and entomologist Dr. Wayne Gall of the State Heath Department. Others
interested in joining the project either as mentors or scientist-advisors
should contact David Hartney, Managing Director, First Hand Learning.
The Program Evaluation Group of Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts
will provide formative evaluation and research the impact of the program
on the science achievement of the participants.
Dow concluded, “This is a great chance to engage city kids in serious
science.”
First Hand Learning is a non-profit corporation founded in 1998 to promote
inquiry-based teaching, learning from direct experience, and closer links
between cultural institutions and schools.
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