Environmental Educators of North Carolina Recognizes Forestry Graduate Student with Outstanding Service Award

News Release – November 30, 2009
Media Contact – Elizabeth Burke, 703.281.6626

The Environmental Educators of North Carolina (EENC) recently honored Shelby Gull Laird, Ph.D. candidate in the Forestry and Environmental Resources Department at NCSU, with one of the organization’s  two awards for Outstanding Service. The Environmental Educators of North Carolina is the state’s professional organization representing environmental educators including classroom teachers, state and national park rangers, museum educators, and educators working in other non-formal settings.

Laird has served as EENC’s policy chair and is currently the organization’s president-elect. She has also been instrumental in creating EENC’s successful bid to host the 2011 conference of the North American Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE). This conference, calendared for October 11-16, 2011, will bring 1,200 of the world’s environmental educators to North Carolina for a professional development conference highlighting the best of our state’s natural and cultural resources.  

The NAAEE conference includes a research symposium, promising a mix of plenary presentations by well-known researchers, discussions about the future of EE research, and submitted presentations from the North American and broader international EE research community, and provides opportunities for graduate student professional development.

Over the past eight years, Laird has had the opportunity to promote environmental education in two related roles. For four years, she taught earth/environmental science at Garner Magnet High School.  Subsequent to that, she developed the highly regarded “It’s Our Water” professional development program, working with the nonprofit North Carolina based Environmental Education Fund.

Commenting on her commitment to environmental education, Laird sees it as an effective tool for helping children achieve benchmarks established in North Carolina’s Standard Course of Study.  “For example,” she notes, “teachers can take their students outside to monitor water quality or conduct wildlife inventories on their own school grounds.  These lessons promote retention better than reading from a textbook.”

She emphasizes that environmental education isn’t just about achieving science standards. “Environmental education can be a part of every subject area, from language arts to social studies.”

“In receiving EENC’s Outstanding Service Award, I am proud to serve Environmental Educators across North Carolina to help get our citizens of all ages outdoors.”

EENC’s second Outstanding Service Award was presented to Renee Strnad, the state coordinator for Project Learning Tree (multi-disciplinary environmental education program for educators and students in PreK-12), and a liaison between the College of Natural Resources at NC State University and environmental educators.

For more information about EENC membership, please visit our website at eenc.org.

###

Below: Shelby Gull Laird accepting her award from North Carolina Superintendent for Public Instruction, Dr. June Atkinson
Shelby accepting her award from June Atkinson

NC State GIS Expert Helps Students Map the Way to Good Food

News Release – November 30, 2009

Charlynne Smith - GIS Research Associate at NC state UniversityCharlynne Smith, GIS research associate with the Recreation Resources Service at NC State and a graduate of NC State's Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management program put her geographic information science knowledge and mapping expertise to work recently as part of a partnership with  Advocates for Health in Action

In a project funded through the Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation, Smith developed a community asset map for Wake County.

The purpose of the interactive map is to show existing infrastructure that provides opportunity for physical activity and healthful eating choices. The mapping tool developed by Smith was used by area teens to display data they collected about the availability of healthful foods in their community.

“The students are excited about learning to use geospatial technology and that the information collected adds value to our spatial database." according to Smith.  "One goal of the project is to improve awareness of and access to affordable healthful food and physical activity for children and families in Wake County. By using mapping technology to identify the distribution of current assets,  plus the added student evaluation of those assets, we are helping the partnership better design an advocacy agenda and the students are making an impact to improve their community.”

At least 30 North Carolina teenagers are involved in the current project, including 4-H teams in Wake Forest, downtown Raleigh and northern Wake County, in addition to Fuquay-Varina.
GIS Map detail showing healthy food options at grocery storeTo collect the data, teams of teens fanned out, armed with GPS devices and a survey to assess healthful food items in the stores. Users will be able to click on numbered locations, and see a picture of the store and a rating of its healthy selections.

The first phase of the map was unveiled in on November 21, 2009.  Additional features, including trails, parks and recreational sites, will be added later. All will be available to the public at the advocacy group's Web site at www.advocatesforhealthinaction.com.

Read the recent article about the project in the News and Observer

Related Links

NC Recreation Resource Service

Geospatial Information Sciences at NC State University

Natural Resources Faculty Receive Funding to Study Potential for Urban Forests to Promote Physical Activity and Health

News Release – Novemeber 6, 2009

Contact: Dr. Myron Floyd 919.513.8026 myron_floyd@ncsu.edu

urban forestOn October 28, 2009,  Agriculture Secretary Thom Vilsack announced the selection of a team of researchers from the College of Natural Resources at North Carolina State University as recipients of a USDA Federal Urban and Community Forestry Grant to examine the potential for urban and community forests to promote physical activity and health. The group was one of only 10 projects to receive the competitive cost-share grants.

According to project principal investigator Dr. Myron Floyd, "Two of the ten leading public health challenges in the U.S. are physical inactivity and obesity. Studies of the built environment show that community design and urban form shape opportunities for physical activity, but few studies have examined the specific contributions that urban and community forests make to public health through physical activity. That's what we intended to do with this project."

A multi-disciplinary team of researchers will compile and integrate national epidemiologic and health surveillance data with data from urban forest inventory databases to examine relationships among urban forest characteristics and physical activity and health. One level of analyses will examine these relationships between cities, exploring national trends. A second level of analysis will employ higher resolution data to focus on three metropolitan areas to determine the relative influence of urban forest characteristics, community design, and population characteristics on physical activity and obesity. 

Results of the study will be of great interest to policy makers and professionals working in the natural resources and public health arenas.

Researchers on the project include: from the Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management – Dr Myron Floyd (PI), Dr. Dorothy Anderson, Dr. Perver Baran, Dr. Hugh Devine, Dr. Karla Henderson, Dr. Yu-Fai Leung; and from the Department of Forestry & Environmental Resources – Dr. Melissa McHale. 

Read the USDA Press Release 

Wakefield High School FFA Forestry Team Wins County Contest

 NC Cooperative Extension

News Release –  October 1, 2009
Media Contact – Renee Strnad  919.515.5518

Raleigh, NC – Twenty Wake County high school students from four high schools gathered at North Carolina State University's Schenck Memorial Forest on September 30, 2009, for the 2009 Wake County FFA Forestry Contest.  Participating high schools included East Wake, Knightdale, Wake Forest, and Wakefield. 
 
The Wakefield team, lead by teacher Jodi Riedel, placed first in the competition.  Ben Stalder, a Senior at Wakefield, was the top scoring individual in the contest. Other Wakefield team members are Blake Baines, Kate Orton, and Josh Tsujimura. Wakefield, along with Knightdale and Wake Forest High Schools, now have the opportunity to represent Wake County at the FFA Regional Competition held in April at Clemmons Educational State Forest in Clayton, North Carolina. 
 
The FFA members competed in four areas; tree identification, saw timber estimation, pulpwood estimation, and cut and leave in which students must determine what trees they would keep or remove depending on management objectives within a given area. The contest was administered by Renee Strnad, Environmental Educator with North Carolina State University's Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, and Jennifer Grantham, Education Director with the North Carolina Forestry Association.

Wakefield FFA Forestry Team Members
Wakefield High School FFA Forestry Team.  L-R: Kate Orton, Teacher Jodi Riedel, Ben Stalder, Blake Baines, and Josh Tsujimura.

Solving the Period Problem: Researchers Develop Sanitary Pads from Local Organic Materials

NC State News Release – October 5, 2009

Contact:  Caroline Barnhill, News Services – 919.515.6251

Prototype of sanitary pad made from banana stem fibers produced at NC State UniversityFor most American women, their “time of the month” is seen as a hindrance to daily life. In impoverished and developing countries, however, monthly periods are a major cause for concern among women. The lack of affordable, quality sanitary pads results in females missing up to 50 days of school annually – thereby compromising their educational and professional potential. Researchers at North Carolina State University are helping to combat the problem by designing affordable pads made from natural, available materials that will allow for local production and sale.

“This is the kind of project I’ve wanted to be involved with for a long time – using my knowledge of textiles and the sciences to make a real impact in the underserved parts of the world,” says Dr. Marian McCord, associate professor of textile engineering chemistry, science and biomedical engineering at NC State. McCord was contacted by Sustainable Health Enterprises (SHE), a social enterprise dedicated to developing a franchise model led by young women to manufacture and distribute affordable, high-quality and environmentally friendly sanitary pads in underserved parts of the world.

Former President Bill Clinton recently named the SHE project one of the “commitments to action” at the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting in September. Established in 2005, the Clinton Global Initiative brings together a community of global leaders to devise and implement innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing challenges.

A prototype of the sanitary pad, produced by textile engineering student David W. Allen, is made from banana stem fibers. McCord and colleagues across NC State are using their knowledge in areas such as nonwovens, wood and paper science, and medical textiles to develop a sanitary pad from materials readily available in local areas – such as the fiber from banana stems in Rwanda. The pads will be sold by community health workers for 30 percent less than the available brand.

“In some of these areas of Africa, a month’s supply of imported sanitary pads cost more than a day’s worth of wages. The donations they receive from individuals help, but they simply are not a long-term solution to the problem,” says Elizabeth Scharpf, founder and CEO of SHE. “Our goal is to create affordable pads that are able to be easily manufactured for a low cost at the local level – and the research being conducted at NC State helps us do that.”

Researchers in the Department of Wood and Paper Science at NC StateDrs. Lucian Lucia, Medwick Byrd and Hasan Jameel – took  banana stem fibers, which are easily accessible in Rwanda, and put them through a series of chemical treatments and mechanical actions in order to change their composition from coarse, waxy fibers into soft, billowy materials that are more amenable to absorbing liquid. Students in a textile engineering senior design course, led by Dr. Russell Gorga, associate professor of textile engineering, then incorporated the material into comfortable, effective and environmentally benign covers to create the prototypes currently under evaluation. The final prototype was produced by David W. Allen, a senior in textile engineering at NC State.

“The idea behind our research was to keep this process extremely simple – we employed materials that were cheap and easy to work with,” Lucia says. “In order for this project to be successful, it was imperative that the process could be replicated in other parts of the world – and that the average person, not necessarily a scientist, could create these sanitary pads. Our part in this important project was to show that turning banana stem fiber into an absorbent material is possible – and we’re very pleased that was exactly what we were able to do.”

“Our hope is that through this research, we’ll take a step toward improving the lives of millions of impoverished women in Rwanda, and perhaps all of Africa,” McCord says. “This project is just one of many examples of how a university without a medical school like NC State can have a major impact on global health.”