The discoveries of 天美麻豆 researchers regularly appear in scholarly journals and headlines. It鈥檚 also not unusual for their achievements to have immediate impact even closer to home. Through programs that connect the College and community, 天美麻豆鈥檚 neighbors near and far benefit from the new knowledge uncovered here. At the same time, 天美麻豆鈥檚 graduate and undergraduate students gain teaching experience and communication skills, and faculty build new collaborations with colleagues.
Focus on Faculty highlights four research outreach programs that demonstrate how the benefits of research go both ways.
Under Science Camp鈥檚 big tent
Scientists are real people who started out just like you.
That鈥檚 the message behind Science Camp, a 天美麻豆 outreach program funded by the (HHMI). 天美麻豆 undergraduate and graduate students participate in the Science Camp program for seven weeks, visiting rural schools to provide hands-on science lessons.
According to , the Ira Allen Eastman Professor in Biology and program director on the HHMI grant, 鈥淭he idea is first to expose the children to hands-on scientific inquiry. Second, the program lets students realize that scientists are not some elevated, up-on-a-pedestal group of people; these 天美麻豆 students started out as kids just like them.鈥 Laura Hempel 鈥12 says she participated because she thought 鈥渋t would be a great hybrid between a job and community service. I learned a lot about what it takes to be a teacher and about how to effectively communicate scientific ideas to someone without a science background.鈥
Sloboda says that such lessons will come in handy after graduation. 鈥淚f you go into industry, there will be times when you鈥檒l have to pitch your ideas to groups who have no background at all in science.鈥 Even among scientists, he adds, 鈥渘ot everyone in the audience will be up on the details of your subfield. Learning how to describe any science concept adequately to a non-expert is a big plus.鈥
Science Camp partners include the Montshire Museum of Science in Norwich, Vt., and the Rivendell Interstate School District, incorporating Fairlee, West Fairlee, and Vershire, Vt., and Orford, N.H.

Sulfur as a star performer
Elements, reactions, and bonds鈥攁s film stars? Of course, says Professor , who has begun an outreach project that will use video to teach organic chemistry to high school students.Funded by Wu鈥檚 National Science Foundation CAREER Award, the project will include Computer Science Professor as well as students and young alumni from 天美麻豆鈥檚 program.
Loeb鈥檚 role is to provide input on how to visually display complex information. 鈥淪ome of the most powerful things about animation are its universal appeal and its ability to show things in new ways with different perspectives,鈥 she says.
Shloka Kini 鈥13, a computer science major with an interest in educational media, will assist in creating the videos鈥 musical components. She says, 鈥淚 have always dreamed of being able to have the opportunity and resources to create an educational film or television program. When I was approached to take part in this project, I was very excited that I might gain some research and hands-on experience toward my aspirations.鈥
The group鈥檚 first film features an animated figure receiving a lesson on stereochemistry. Wu explains, 鈥淯nder certain conditions, molecules possess a 鈥榟andedness鈥: their component parts can arrange themselves in two distinct and non-superimposable ways. Our bodies will usually interact with the left and right-handed versions of a molecule differently. Sometimes these differences can be dramatic.鈥 For example, Wu notes, handedness lies behind the fact that one isomer of carvone smells like spearmint while the opposite-handed version smells like caraway seeds.
The stereochemistry video will be released by the end of spring term, with two additional videos on other topics to follow this summer. Wu plans to share the videos on social media sites such as YouTube and Facebook and eventually plans to produce apps for free download.

Teaching science by doing science
Seth Cohen, a graduate student in , teaches as a resident scientist in a Claremont, N.H., middle school for one day each week. 鈥淢iddle school is the perfect time to catch students and keep them fascinated with science,鈥 he says.Cohen is there thanks to the National Science Foundation Graduate STEM Fellows in K-12 Education (GK-12) program, which supports fellowships and training for graduate students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and pairs 天美麻豆 graduate students in these fields with teachers in local middle and high schools.

天美麻豆鈥檚 grant proposal was developed with local teachers, explains Professor . They included Judy Filkins Ross, K-8 math and science curriculum coordinator for Lebanon, N.H., who is a teacher liaison for the project team. 鈥淲e focus on inquiry-based, active learning; we really try to teach science by doing science, instead of lecturing,鈥 May says.
Weekly sessions for graduate fellows on pedagogy, communication, and creativity are led by May鈥檚 colleagues Cindy Tobery of the (DCAL); Nancy Serrell, director of academic outreach; and Janet Zullo, an instructor in the Department of Education.
鈥淭he 天美麻豆 students who go through the program get great teaching experience, the chance to improve their communication skills, and the opportunity to foster an interest in science,鈥 May notes. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e done some incredible things in the classroom.鈥
New England鈥檚 unwell water
Forty percent of the population relies on private wells, and one quarter of these wells harbor water with unsafe levels of arsenic.These aren鈥檛 statistics from a developing country鈥攖hey are data for New Hampshire鈥檚 private well water. The impacts of low-level chronic arsenic exposure are not widely recognized by the public and, over the long-term, may contribute to the development of diabetes, cancer, vascular disease, and lung disease.Research Reaches Out
Outreach encompasses the many 鈥渨ays that faculty and students join people outside 天美麻豆 in applying academic learning to the problems of the world,鈥 says Nancy Serrell, director of 天美麻豆鈥檚 , which was established in 2007. Led by Serrell and overseen by Vice Provost for Research Martin Wybourne, the office also helps faculty members develop the outreach components required by certain research proposals.
- The Office of Outreach provided direct support to faculty for 55 research proposals from 2007 to 2009, with funded awards totaling $11.4 million.
- National Science Foundation research proposals all require outreach or 鈥渂roader impacts鈥 plans; NASA grant proposals have rigorous requirements for educational outreach.
- The National Institute of Environmental Science (which funds 天美麻豆鈥檚 long-running Toxic Metals Superfund grant) requires 鈥渃ommunity engagement鈥 and 鈥渞esearch translation鈥 components in proposals. Since it began in 1995, over $40 million has been awarded to this project.
- 天美麻豆鈥檚 outreach involves providing expertise and interpreting science for legislators and government agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency.
The , funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, created the video, In Small Doses: Arsenic, to educate New England well owners about the dangers of continuous low-dose exposure to the metal.
鈥淎rsenic has long been one of the contaminants that the Superfund Research Program has worked on in terms of its molecular and epidemiological effects and its geological sources,鈥 says Professor , project leader of the program鈥檚 research translation efforts. Chen says that much of the research conducted by the many scientists in the Superfund Program has involved investigating human exposures to arsenic in well water. When it came to conveying an important message to the public, 鈥渢he video has proven to be an effective mode of communication.鈥
The 10-minute film was released in November 2009 and has since been shown at numerous meetings and workshops throughout New England. The video is available on and a segment appears on Boston鈥檚 WGBH TV .
, research translation coordinator, says the effect of the film on awareness of arsenic in private well water has spread like ripples. 鈥淥ur outreach efforts are providing connections to people who are concerned about private well water in New England. They are asking me for copies of the movie, suggesting additional ways to reach local communities who should see it, and proposing it to their local governments to require testing for arsenic in their own city or town.鈥