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- New Curriculum at Berea College
- Proposed Chemical Weapons Incinerator
- Service Learning Project for
Environmental Issues Class
- More Questions
Arise...
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In 1992-93 Berea College was in the final stages of developing a new curriculum.
Dr. Jan Pearce was a member of the planning committee for the course
in quantitative reasoning which would be required of all students
in the new curriculum. During these committee meetings, she began
the development of a new course designed around real world projects
which she believed would bring the course material to life and address
the knowledge transfer difficulties in a way that textbook problems
could not. She created the course "Environmental Issues: A Mathematical
Modeling Approach" in which students can satisfy the introductory
quantitative reasoning requirement at Berea College by modeling environmental
data and using the models for forecasting. This course is typically
populated by freshman and sophomores from a wide range of majors on
campus.
In the Fall of 1996, David Sawyer, director of an outreach and service organization
at Berea College, brought to Jan's attention a call for service
learning project proposals from Campus Compact and the Corporation
for National Service. Upon reading it, Jan became interested in
writing a grant to involve her students in modeling a local issue.
A proposed local chemical weapons incinerator issue dominated
all other environmental issues in the area. Located only ten miles
from Berea College in Richmond, Kentucky is the Blue Grass Army
Depot (BGAD), a site which stores approximately 1.6% of this nation's
chemical weapon stockpile. In spite of strong local opposition to
incineration and the existence of alternative chemical weapon disposal
methods, the US army had been promoting a plan to build an incinerator
at BGAD to dispose of the chemical weapons stockpile. Thus, the
Kentucky Environmental Foundation (KEF) was formed in 1990 to oppose
incineration as a method of chemical weapon disposal.
Because of the importance of the issue to the local community,
it had to be the one first considered as the topic of a modeling
project. The problem in Jan's mind was that modeling even a small
portion of this issue would be too difficult for the level of knowledge
of the students in the Environmental Issues class. Nevertheless,
Jan went to discuss the possibility of such a project with the KEF.
Together, Jan and the activists at the KEF, were able to identify
a modeling project of an appropriate level.
The Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program Immediate
Response Zone had been defined by governmental agencies as "the
closest geographic areas around a hazard site that are the most
rapidly and severely affected by a hazard." This zone was calculated
as a ten kilometer radius slightly reshaped for ease of planning
to conform to roads. Seeing that the government had employed a radial
model that did not even take into consideration average wind directions
or speeds made it easy to believe that students in the course could
successfully develop a better mathematical model for predicting
the dispersion from the proposed incinerator. Thus, Jan wrote the
grant and received funding in Spring of 1996.
The students in the class collected relevant data, researched existing related
studies, and developed their own simple mathematical model. This
service-learning project was identified as exemplary and published in "Science
and Society: Redefining the Relationship"1. The students in the
class presented their work to an affiliate of the KEF in a public meeting held
at the Court House in the City of Berea. The response from the KEF was quite
positive. In fact, members of the KEF began asking many additional questions
that could be considered mathematically. However, Jan realized that finding
answers to some of these questions would require modeling of a significantly
more sophisticated nature. Discussing these questions and how answers could be
found with a colleague, James Lynch, motivated the two of them to begin a
summer research program working in collaboration with local environmental
organizations. |