教育・アウトリーチ(G)
セッション小記号 教育・アウトリーチ
セッションID G-01
タイトル 和文 Citizen and Community Science: Building the next-generation environmental scientist and policymaker
英文 Citizen and Community Science: Building the next-generation environmental scientist and policymaker
タイトル短縮名 和文 Citizen and Community Science
英文 Citizen and Community Science
代表コンビーナ 氏名 和文 Charles J Vorosmarty
英文 Charles J Vorosmarty
所属 和文 City University of New York Advanced Science Research Center
英文 City University of New York Advanced Science Research Center
共同コンビーナ 1 氏名 和文 Rebecca A Boger
英文 Rebecca A Boger
所属 和文 CUNY Brooklyn College
英文 CUNY Brooklyn College
共同コンビーナ 2 氏名 和文 Larisa Schelkin
英文 Larisa Schelkin
所属 和文 Global STEM
英文 Global STEM
共同コンビーナ 3 氏名 和文 Kotaro Tanaka
英文 Kotaro Tanaka
所属 和文 Ocean Policy Research Institute of the Sasakawa Peace Foundation
英文 Ocean Policy Research Institute of the Sasakawa Peace Foundation
共同コンビーナ 4 氏名 和文 Tomohiro Oda
英文 Tomohiro Oda
所属 和文 Universities Space Research Association
英文 Universities Space Research Association
共同コンビーナ 5 氏名 和文 Mark Mocettini Shimamoto
英文 Mark Mocettini Shimamoto
所属 和文 American Geophysical Union
英文 American Geophysical Union
共同コンビーナ 6 氏名 和文 小熊 幸子
英文 Sachiko Oguma
所属 和文 笹川平和財団海洋政策研究所
英文 Ocean Policy Research Institute
発表言語 E
スコープ 和文
Community science is a citizen-centered, transdisciplinary approach to addressing local challenges. While global issues such as air pollution, water quality, and biodiversity loss affect everyone, effective solutions must be tailored to the specific needs and capacities of the local communities most impacted. Developing actionable, sustainable outcomes requires the active involvement of  local communities, natural and social scientists, private sector partners, educators, and policy practitioners. Over the past decades, interest in citizen science has grown around the world while advances in low-cost sensors have increased opportunities for citizen scientists to collect cost-effective robust high spatial and temporal datasets that can address community needs.  Early proponents of citizen/community science include the Thriving Earth Exchange and Community Science Exchange initiatives at the American Geophysical Union (AGU), and the 30-year NASA GLOBE program operating in 127 countries and a public dataset of over 270 million observations.

For many Earth scientists, this approach transforms how research questions are framed, how value is defined, and how success is measured. This JpGU session will  highlight activities and case studies from the diverse JpGU-AGU community while inviting participants to explore adoption of community science methods in their own work. We will report on a new non-profit, the Next Generation Global Collaboratory, that was formed in response to shifting US Government research priorities and removal of public funds for GLOBE. Good practices under AGU's initiative will also be presented. Those activities promote partnerships among various stakeholders using emerging technologies that foster business opportunities, scientific breakthrough, and communities' benefit. Discussion will include project conceptualization, resource mobilization, inclusive communication, data democracy, open data practices, attribution, and links to decision-making.
英文
Community science is a citizen-centered, transdisciplinary approach to addressing local challenges. While global issues such as air pollution, water quality, and biodiversity loss affect everyone, effective solutions must be tailored to the specific needs and capacities of the local communities most impacted. Developing actionable, sustainable outcomes requires the active involvement of  local communities, natural and social scientists, private sector partners, educators, and policy practitioners. Over the past decades, interest in citizen science has grown around the world while advances in low-cost sensors have increased opportunities for citizen scientists to collect cost-effective robust high spatial and temporal datasets that can address community needs.  Early proponents of citizen/community science include the Thriving Earth Exchange and Community Science Exchange initiatives at the American Geophysical Union (AGU), and the 30-year NASA GLOBE program operating in 127 countries and a public dataset of over 270 million observations.

For many Earth scientists, this approach transforms how research questions are framed, how value is defined, and how success is measured. This JpGU session will  highlight activities and case studies from the diverse JpGU-AGU community while inviting participants to explore adoption of community science methods in their own work. We will report on a new non-profit, the Next Generation Global Collaboratory, that was formed in response to shifting US Government research priorities and removal of public funds for GLOBE. Good practices under AGU's initiative will also be presented. Those activities promote partnerships among various stakeholders using emerging technologies that foster business opportunities, scientific breakthrough, and communities' benefit. Discussion will include project conceptualization, resource mobilization, inclusive communication, data democracy, open data practices, attribution, and links to decision-making.
発表方法 口頭および(または)ポスターセッション
時間 講演番号 タイトル 発表者
口頭発表 5月24日 AM1
9:15 - 9:30 G01-01 Science in Service: Turning Expertise into Community Action Amanda Shores
9:30 - 9:45 G01-02 Community science as an overlooked, but essential opportunity for scientists and engineers Tomohiro Oda
9:45 - 10:00 G01-03 Thundercloud Project: Citizen Science Observations of Gamma-Ray Glows and
Development of a Next Generation Detector
大谷 水都
10:00 - 10:15 G01-04 Playing Toward Partnership: Using the Watershed Game to Foster Collaboration for a Just and Sustainable Future Shu-Min Janet Tsai
講演番号 タイトル 発表者
ポスター発表 5月24日 PM3
G01-P01 From Knowledge Centric to Action Oriented Ocean Education- Key Drivers of Marine Citizenship among Taiwanese Junior High Students peiyi chang
G01-P02 Fostering Ocean Literacy in Primary Education: Curriculum Trends of European Blue Schools under the Ocean Decade ChengChieh Chang
G01-P03 Youth-Led Social Innovation in Satoumi Seascape Restoration: A Case Study Based on the Rural Innovation Ecosystem Framework CHIEN-YU CHEN
G01-P04 Analyzing the Effectiveness of SEPLS Resilience Indicators in Advancing Local Environmental Initiatives CHIH-WEI TU
G01-P05 Development of Educational tools of Extraterrestrial Rover Operation 渡邊 華萌
G01-P06 IUGS Geological Heritage Collections: Safeguarding Geo-collections for Future Generations Efterpi Koskeridou
G01-P07 Soil-in-a-Bottle: Community Science for Nationwide Soil Sampling and Greenhouse Gas Measurements in Japan 青木 裕一