The CSULB departments of Geological Sciences and Geography, together with the
Archæology and the Environmental Science and Policy programs, have
received a second round of funding from the National Science Foundation to
continue and expand an innovative
collaborative partnership with several community colleges and local high
schools. Its goal is to improve the research and educational experiences of
underrepresented students in the geoscience disciplines (geology, physical
geography, archæology, and environmental science and policy). The goals
of GDEP are to:
- increase the number of underrepresented students who have a broad
educational and research experience in the geosciences
- enhance the quantity and quality of geoscience research and teaching by
faculty members from CSULB, community colleges, and high schools
- increase the awareness by community college and high school students of
the geosciences and their associated research careers and educational
requirements
- increase the awareness of the geosciences and their career prospects
among parents, friends, and the communities around underrepresented students
to build community support for their education in the geosciences
- enable a smooth transition of underrepresented students from community
colleges and local high schools into advanced undergraduate study in the
geosciences
- increase the number of geoscience majors who are retained in their
disciplines
Community college and high school science faculty have been invited to the
University for professional activities with their CSULB GDEP colleagues. They
and their students are collaborating with CSULB GDEP faculty on geoscience
research projects during an intensive six-week summer field and lab program
and throughout the academic year in research design, data analysis, and
presentation.
Students are engaging in data collection and interpretation, conducting web-
based geoscience research, and learning safe procedures for the lab and field.
The experience will culminate in presentations at professional conferences in
the geosciences, possible team-authored publications, and presentations in the
student participants' own schools.
Current CSULB geoscience majors are serving as peer mentors for lower division
students who are interested in majoring in the geosciences. Underrepresented
students in the lower division science courses will be invited to geoscience
department open houses to introduce them to careers in the geosciences. CSULB
GDEP faculty will conduct bi-annual visits to community college campuses to
address issues affecting the ease of transition of underrepresented students
to the geosciences and to enhance the support given to students to select a
major in the geosciences.
Additionally, GDEP 2 is bringing in the community via family field trips
throughout the year. During these trips, families learn about many engaging
geoscience topics in the field close to home and about career and salary
prospects in these fields perennially affected by labor shortages.