OSA NEWS
OSA and SPIE Awarded $1.7 Million Grant to Implement National Science Education
Program for Underrepresented Middle School Students
--New program, Hands-On Optics: Making an Impact with Light, will bring
science
education to tens of thousands of underrepresented children nationwide
--
WASHINGTON DC, September 29, 2003 – The Optical Society of America (OSA)
and The International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE), along with key
industry partners, Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement (MESA) and
the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO), were awarded today a $1.7
million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to implement a national
middle school science education program: Hands-On Optics: Making an Impact
with Light (HOO).
HOO is a three-year informal science program designed to bring optics education
to tens of thousands of underrepresented students nationwide. A key to the
program, according to OSA and SPIE, is its focus on actively connecting optics
industry volunteers with teachers and individual students. The program will
reach out to females and minority groups who are typically not adequately represented
in the science and technology workforce. Sample activities include building
a kaleidoscope, building a pinhole camera, and creating holograms.
“HOO is truly a unique program targeting scientific activities not only
at students in critical populations – educationally disadvantaged, middle-school-aged
learners – but also their entire support network. Its activities will
be geared towards actively involving parents, teachers and community volunteers
in the learning process,” said Elizabeth Rogan, executive director, OSA. “Our
goal with HOO is to enhance science education for these populations and to
foster an interest in science, which may open doors to futures these students
had never considered.”
SPIE Executive Director Eugene Arthurs emphasized, “This program fulfills
a critical component of SPIE's educational mission. We are confident that fostering
an interest in science at an early age will help supplement the ranks of future
optical engineers, those who will fulfill the promise of the ‘century
of the photon.’ The leadership of SPIE is especially pleased that HOO
will provide opportunities for historically underrepresented students to experience
the excitement and potential of optics and photonics.”
“
We are very pleased to partner with SPIE, OSA and NOAO to bring the study of
this emerging science to our students,” said MESA Executive Director
Michael Aldaco. “MESA has more than 30 years of experience working with
educationally disadvantaged students.”
Based on recommendations from scientists,
as well as science and technology educators and experts, the HOO module will
consist of optics-related programs
that will take place after school, during weekend sessions, and at summer
camps or family workshops. Through the activity modules, students will gain
experience
and understanding of optics principles. They will rely on inquiry, critical
thinking, and problem solving skills involving optics and will also learn
how optics interfaces with other disciplines.
"Children and adults everywhere are enthralled by light, shadows, and
the colors of our natural world," said Dr. Stephen Pompea, manager of
science education at NOAO. "Our fascination with astronomy and the microscopic
world is fueled by advances in optics and optical technology. HOO has been
designed to use the appeal of optical wonders to teach practical lessons about
light and its uses."
By actively engaging K-12 students in optics activities,
HOO will:
- Create links from the professional optics
community to the informal science education community.
- Reach underrepresented
middle school cohorts in science and technology, and connect with their
parents and teachers, school districts and communities.
- Provide
opportunities for the target populations to succeed in collaborative learning
and problem solving through inquiry-based, hands-on applications of
optical engineering skills and knowledge.
- Increase science and technology knowledge
for students, and increase awareness of optics as a discipline and career
that cross-cuts numerous fields.
Funds provided through the HOO grant will also make possible extensive training
for teachers, parents and optics professionals, all of whom will play various
leadership roles within the HOO activities.
Development of the pilot program is scheduled to begin next month. Expansion
toward a national program will take place in 2006.
NOAO will play a key role in training teachers and volunteers, and in developing
the optics kits. MESA teachers will implement the program initially, which
will expand to selected sites across the country in 2004 and 2005.
About OSA
The Optical Society of America (OSA) brings together an international network
of the industry’s preeminent optics and photonics scientists, engineers,
educators, technicians and business leaders. Representing more than 15,000
members from approximately 100 different countries, OSA promotes the worldwide
generation, application and dissemination of optics and photonics knowledge
through its meetings, events and journals. Since its founding in 1916, OSA
member benefits, programming, publications, products and services have set
the industries standard of excellence. Additional information on OSA is available
on the Society’s Web site at www.osa.org.
About SPIE
The International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE) was founded in 1955
to bring together engineers from several technical disciplines involved in
high-speed, optically based test and measurement. Since then, the field of
optical engineering has evolved from a multidisciplinary amalgam of physics,
electrical and mechanical engineering, and materials science into an identifiable
discipline in its own right. Simultaneously, SPIE has grown into a vital
international organization that addresses virtually all subfields associated
with optics
and photonics technologies and their many engineering, scientific, and commercial
applications.
About NOAO
Home of Kitt Peak National Observatory, the National Optical Astronomy Observatory
(NOAO) is located near Tucson, AZ, and is operated by the Association of
Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) Inc., under a cooperative
agreement with the NSF.
About MESA
Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement (MESA) is one of the nation’s
oldest and most prestigious programs assisting educationally disadvantaged
students to excel in math and science and attain baccalaureate degrees in math-based
fields. Over 34,000 California students participate in MESA’s pre-college,
community college and university-level engineering programs.