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Academic Plan
March 31, 2000
The Raystown Field Station (RFS) Academic Planning Committee developed the following Academic Plan for RFS, important in light of the $5 million funding from Representative Shuster, Congress and the Army Corps of Engineers for RFS facilities expansion. The purpose of this Plan is to outline how RFS fits best within the mission of Juniata College. We want the funding to support our programmatic mission, rather than have the funding force our programming. The Committee used the 1999 External Review of the RFS as a basis for the Plan, as well as having the academic plan from Bodega Marine Laboratory as a template. Details of the mechanisms to attain the goals described in the Plan are attached in the Appendix. These details will be fleshed out as planning for the RFS expansion continues.
Mission of Raystown Field Station : A Center for Environmental Research and Education

The mission of the Raystown Field Station is to serve the mission of Juniata College by providing a locale and facilities for experiences integrating theory and application, especially through environmental research, research training and education.

The following goals address the implementation of this mission:

1. Provide an educational climate that results in successful teaching and learning opportunities throughout the year.
2. Provide a research climate that results in fundamental discoveries about the environment.
3. Provide a climate in which students can develop to their full potential, as contributors to society, informed citizens, and caring and responsible adults.
4. Integrate undergraduate research training with research activities.
5. Build and maintain a site-specific monitoring database.
6. Establish mechanisms to communicate field science to the general public.
7. Serve the larger community through environmental education, meeting facilities and other outreach activities.

The allocation of time and resources toward these goals are envisioned as follows:
* 45%-60% Undergraduate Curriculum.
* 30%-45% Research and Research Training.
* 10% Outreach.
There is a natural overlap between these divisions. Research training is an integral part of Juniata College's undergraduate curriculum. Participation in outreach activities can contribute significantly to the education of our students. Rather than attempt to further specify the exact categories, we prefer to maintain the category ranges, thereby recognizing the inherent overlays of these categories. However, we also note our ultimate priority is that of undergraduate education, in whatever form that may take.
It is important that the activities of all subsets of the Institution are tied back to the overall Mission Statement of Juniata College. As we face a $5 million gift for facilities we need to clearly state how these facilities and programs relate to the Mission of the College. The current mission of Juniata College seeks to develop students that reach "their full potential as contributors to society, informed citizens, and caring and responsible adults." Informed, responsible citizens are citizens with environmental awareness, who assume responsibility for future generations. Curriculum, research and outreach activities at RFS will promote this component in the education of a responsible citizenry.

We can attain these goals for RFS in the following ways:

1. Undergraduate Curriculum:

A number of approaches are suggested to make RFS an integral part of Juniata College. These approaches will require creativity in logistics and advance planning. In two of these plans (Semester-At-The-Field Station, and Summer Specialty Courses) students would live at RFS and take all of their classes at RFS. These plans will be fully costed (Appendix : Financial Section), so that their curriculum has its own funding stream. The RFS dormitories will have year-round use (Appendix : Facilities Section), increasing the number of beds available on the main campus, thereby permitting increased enrollments at the College and therefore a tuition stream supporting RFS.

A. Semester-At-the-Field Station

The goals of the Semester at the Field Station are to provide students an immersion experience in a natural environment as well as a small-group intensive-study experience. Students would live at the station and take an entire semester course load at RFS. Courses from across the disciplines (courses normally taught at the College) could be taught at RFS. These might NOT just be science courses. Politics, philosophy, art … many courses not needing specialized equipment could be taught at the Field Station, on a rotating basis.

We will begin the Semester-at-the-Field Station incrementally, starting with a curriculum naturally fits the facilities and environment of RFS (ESS, Biology and, Geology) (Appendix : Undergraduate Curriculum). Once we have some experience with logistics of this new curricular concept, we plan to expand to other disciplinary areas (Appendix : Undergraduate Curriculum), so all College faculty have the opportunity to teach in a small-group, immersion setting that the expanded RFS will provide.

We would creatively design the ensemble of courses available, a number of years in advance, based on faculty and student interests, so students could plan when they need to take FISHN requirements or POE requirements. An example of this design is included in the Appendix.

FISHN courses might not be available at the Station; they could be available via teleconferencing, connecting campus-based classes to RFS classes. The opportunity to occasionally teach at the Station would be open to a majority of faculty, on a rotating basis (Appendix : Undergraduate Curriculum). Note that this will be designed to fit the needs of each faculty member, department and program, rather than try to force a scheduling design onto faculty.

B. Summer Specialty Courses

Within the sciences, many faculty do not have time in their teaching load to teach specialty courses (e.g., fish ecology, ornithology, entomology). We envision summer school at RFS for these types of special courses. These courses would be taught based on faculty interest in teaching summer school specialty courses, as they would be additions to normal teaching load. These courses would include additional salary stipend. Non-science faculty at JC may have a desire to teach summer specialty courses in the setting of Raystown Lake. Specialty courses would be attractive both to Juniata College students and to students from other colleges and universities. Juniata College plans to form a Consortium of undergraduate institutions who have similar curricular interests for summer specialty courses. The Consortium could supply instructors as well as students.

C. Campus Curriculum with RFS Connections

In this approach, faculty schedule an event at RFS, as part of their regular Juniata curriculum. This could be a seminar, laboratory, discussion or some other class-related event. This approach is currently taken by a number of faculty on campus, primarily in Biology, Geology and ESS. With expanded classroom facilities, more departments might make use of RFS.

D. Campus-based Students Taking RFS Classes

Classes taught at RFS might have enrollment not just from RFS resident students but also from campus-based students. This might serve if the number of RFS residents is limited but the course has a higher enrollment and is of interest to more students. This scenario would increase enrollment in RFS classes without requiring more beds at RFS, though it would require a regular transport schedule between RFS and Huntingdon. This is a potential step in the future but not one envisioned as taking place immediately. The purpose of this approach is to maximize the number of students that could benefit from the RFS experience. Student feedback indicates the RFS experience is a highly desirable one. An alternative to this would be the teleconferencing of classes, from RFS to the campus.

E. Consortium

A consortial arrangement with other colleges and universities, both domestic and international, has great potential to support the curricula at RFS. First, the Consortium will provide a funding stream to staff RFS. Second, it will provide students for enrollment, especially valuable during the Summer Specialty Courses. Third, it will provide a more diverse student body, especially valuable for the immersion experiences. Fourth, the Consortium might be a supply of faculty to teach Summer Specialty Courses or as research mentors.

2. Research and Research Training:

The expanded RFS is an opportunity for additional research training for Juniata College students, via research conducted by both Juniata College faculty and by external researchers. The external researchers could mimic the Von Liebig model of a senior visiting research scientist (if such an endowment was available) or could be a visiting scientist who comes for a season, a semester or a year. In this latter category, these researchers would pay for their use of the facility through grants (e.g., NSF). There will be some residential space for these visiting scientists, which they will pay for themselves. These researchers could utilize Juniata College undergraduates as research assistants, both in the summer and during the semester. These researchers might provide seminars to the College or act as research mentors for JC students.

We are interested in research at the station fulfilling a role in research training of undergraduates. The presence of graduate students from other institutions, working on a research team that includes Juniata College students, is of value to the College mission, providing excellent research training to our students. Therefore we do envision graduate students using these facilities.

We also see a role for research at RFS to tie together goals of community service and of curriculum development. For example, watershed research, including a database of environmental parameters, could partner with the Juniata Watershed Partnership and other community groups with watershed concerns.

It would be desirable to have an endowed position of resident research scientist. This would provide a central point for RFS research and research training.

The research program will be wide-ranging, interdisciplinary field research with the following primary focal areas:

* Water Resources
* Hydrology, Hydrogeology and Hydrometerology

* Water Quality Analysis and Monitoring (Biological and Geochemical)
* Stream Corridor Restoration
* Watershed Management
* Population and Community Ecology
* Soil Biology
* Terrestrial Vertebrate Population Ecology
* Aquatic Community Ecology
* Life History Biology
* Physiological Ecology
* Ecological Aspects of Management Practices
* Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Long-Term Data Collection
* Database Development and Management
* Spatial Correlation Analysis
* Visual Presentation

These are areas that fit with the interests of current uses and users. Funding for research (equipment, supplies and personnel) will be crucial for the successful implementation of these plans. We have identified potential funding sources and potential research partners (Appendix : Research Plan). External research funding is an expected. The design of the research facilities will take place with input from a selection of current users.

3. Outreach:

Outreach programs are important agents for communicating scientific findings and transmission of embodied values to non-science students and the general public. Everything from educational programming for the non-Juniata community to alumni activities and conference facilities serve the outreach mission of RFS.

Past and current outreach functions (Appendix : Outreach) have included the following:

* Retreats and Student Club Activities
* K-12 Environmental Education
* Alumni Activities
* General Environmental Education for Raystown Lake visitors
* Conferences for Professional Organizations


Future outreach programming could include the following:

* Summer program for gifted high school students
* Governor's School for Environmental Science
* GLOBE teacher training in environmental monitoring
* Friends of RFS programming for alumni
* Public Seminar Series

Any increase in outreach activities will be based upon the availability of facilities after meeting the needs of undergraduates and research programs. Outreach activities will be self-supporting, through grants, user fees, donations or revenue generators.

The outreach mission is an important one, as it also serves the outreach mission of the Raytown Lake Army Corps of Engineers. RFS could be a model watershed for watershed education at all levels.

APPENDIX : MEMBERSHIP OF ACADEMIC PLANNING COMMITTEE

Provost Lakso

Vice-President for Finance Alexander

Vice-President for Development Hille

Professors:

Demarest (Biology)

Glazier (Biology)

Hague (Politics)

Johnson (ESS)

Martin (ESS)

Mutti

Raystown Field Station Director Yohn

Students:

Ann Parry

Jennifer Bergman

Appendix : Facilities

Facilities at RFS to Support the Mission

A Facilities Committee will be created in March 2000. The task of this Committee will be to develop the design concept and implementation. The design concept will be sent out to architectural firms, asking for responses. From the respondents, architects will be selected. The Facilities Committee will aid in architect selection. It will also aid in choosing field stations to visit to conduct on-site assessments of design components and architects. An NSF planning grant has been written to help fund the field station visits and some aspects of the facilities planning stage.

The following is a draft list of components to be considered in the facilities design:

* Green Technology; facilities themselves as teaching tools.
Laboratories
* Aquatic rearing with lake water feed (both whole and filtered water).
* General lab for ecology, environmental science
* Water and Soil Biogeochemical Analysis lab
*Classrooms
For up to 60, that break down to smaller rooms, that can also be used for conferences and workshops.
* Data Collection Systems, with sensors over the watershed.
* Computer facilities
* Fiber-optic line or other high-speed computer connection between RFS and Juniata's computer network.
* Temporary desk/office space for faculty teaching at RFS.
* Conference capability (consideration when designing bedrooms, bathrooms, and air-conditioning); useful in our Outreach Mission, as well are for our Curricular and Research Missions. Could be a potential funding stream.
* Year-round residence (for 30-40 students and 5 faculty/visiting scientists/staff) therefore
* Water, electric, sewerage, heating…year-round utilities.
* Year-round transport to and from Huntingdon.
* Road maintenance (snow and ice removal)
* Hospitality Services
* Dining
* Laundry
* Summer residence (for approximately 60 students) therefore
* Small, summer-only cottages scattered over landscape (connected by nature trails)

APPENDIX : Finances

Financial Section: Cost-Determination, Marketing and Planning Needs
It is necessary to conduct a cost determination for the Academic Plan, to answer some of the questions listed below. An NSF planning grant has been written to help fund a portion of this cost-accounting.

* What is cost of Semester-at-the Field Station?

* What is the appropriate summer tuition?
* Consortium for Summer Specialty School and Semester-At-The-Field Station
Domestic partners
International partners (DOE Title VIA funding potential)

Appendix : Undergraduate Curriuclum

Template of Curriculum for Four Semesters at the Field Station
We have designed a model-template for four semesters. Two semesters would be for ESS, Biology and Geology students; these would be the initial format, to test out the logistics of the concept with courses that naturally fit the facility. At the start, FISHN courses might be eliminated, until the logistics of the system works out. Later we plan to expand to semesters for other social science students. This is a only model at this point. We do not yet have faculty commitments to this teaching schedule. The presence of a course in the templates below does not signify the agreement of the faculty to teach at RFS.

Some courses would be offered concurrently, so that ideally, half of the students will take one and half will take the other. The average student will take ~15 credits. Independent study opportunities will be an option. This design requires facilities of two laboratories and two classrooms (see Facilities Section).Various course-schedule blocking ideas are possible. For example, the traditional blocking pattern of a 55-minute lecture three-days per week could be replaced by the course meeting for a half-day, once per week. The schedule block will be chosen by the faculty teaching that semester, to maximize efficiency of their teaching load both at RFS and on the Juniata campus. Faculty teaching at RFS will have temporary office facilities, including networked computer access. The Semester-at-the-Field-Station concept will require more advance planning than our current planning.

Appendix : Undergraduate Curriuclum (CONTINUED)
TEMPLATE ONE

Course areas
Fall #1-
ESS

Pre-reqs.

Spring #1

-bio/geology


Pre-reqs.
Non-lab science
BI 432 Environmental Toxicology (3) (Matter) (N) (CW)
Cell Bio,
Ecol or 3rd chem
BI339 Organic Evolution (3) (Glazier) (N)
BI210
Courses
ESS 399 Hydrology I (3) (Johnson) (N)
Intro ESS, Intro Geol or Perm
GL 305 Hydrogeology (3) (Washburn) (N)
Hist.Geo. + Calc I+ 1yr Chem
Lab
ESS399 02 GIS I (3) (Johnson)
Intro ESS
BI 301 General Ecology (4) (Glazier) (N)
Bio II & Chem-Bio Lab II or Perm.
Courses
BI 325/326 Plant ecology and systematics (4) (Gustafson) (N) (CW)
Jr/Sr. standing
GL 220 Geochemistry of H2O (4) (Mutti) (N)
IntroGeo.+ 1yr Chem
ESS320 Env Monitoring (4) (Martin) (N)
Intro ESS
BI 328/329 Limnology (4) (Gustafson) (N)
Jr/Sr. standing
ESS450/BI489 Independent Research
Perm
ESS450/BI489/GL450 Independent Research
Perm
FISHN
AR 120 Art of Environ (3) (Siegel) (FS) (CW)
InternationalTBA
HS 262 North American Env. History (3) (Hsiung) (H) (CW)
 
Humanities TBA
 
Appendix : Undergraduate Curriuclum (CONTINUED)

TEMPLATE TWO:

Course areas

Fall #2

ESS2


Pre-reqs.

Course Area

Spring #2

Social Science


Pre-reqs.
Non-lab BI305 Biostatistics (3) (Staff) (N) (QS)   PACS PACS 200 Intro to PACS (4) (Murray) (I) (CW) PACS 108, 105, 117, PS 101, 102, PY 101, SO 101 or perm
Science ESS 399 Conservation Biology (3) (Martin) (N) IntroESS Bio II Courses PACS 205 Conflict Resolution (3) (Cook-Huffman) (S) (CW) PACS 105, SO101 or perm
Lab BI 350/351 Invertebrate Zoo (4) (Staff) (N) Bio II Politics PS 132 Public Interest Groups & Pol (3) (Hague) (S)  
Courses BI 360/361 Vertebrate Zoo (4) (Yohn and Matter) (N) (CW) Jr/Sr standing Courses PS242 US Foreign Policy (3) (Nagengast) (SI) (CW) PS102
  ESS350 Field Research Methods (4) (Yohn) (N) (CW) ESS200, BI300 or perm   PS 340 Global Environment Politics (3) (Nagengast) (SI) (CW) PS102
  ESS450/BI489 Independent Research Perm

Indep
Study Courses

PS497/PACS 455 Honors or Senior Thesis Research Perm
FISHN CA/GL 213 MEPL (3) (Mutti) (I) (CW)   FISHN Literature  
  Philosophy     History  
Additional Courses Not Scheduled Above:

There are a number of courses that would be appropriate to teach at the field station, such as any that would gain from a small, intensive seminar approach. The following is a list of introductory level that might be valuable prerequisites for students at RFS, preparing students to take other courses when they return to the campus. The courses selected for the Semester-at-the-Field Station will depend on the willingness of an instructor to teach at the station, the courses necessary for the POE and for FISHN requirements

AR 105 Drawing and Design (3) (F)
AR 200 Painting (3) (F)

CA Cultural Analysis

e.g. CA/GL 213W MEPL

EB 130 Intro. to Accounting (3)(S)

EB 101 Introduction to Business (3) (S)

EB 105 Intl. Economic Issues (3)(S)

EB 223 Princ. of Microeconomics (3) (S)

EN 120 Forms of Literature (3) (H)

EN 155 The Short Story (3) (H)

EN 162 Women and Literature (3) (H)

EN 163 Science Fiction (E) (H)

EN 170 World Literatures (3) (HI)

CM 130 Intro. to Human Comm. (3) (H) (CS)

CM 132 Message Analysis (3) (H)

CM 133 Mass Media and Society (3) (H)

FR 110 French I (4) (HI)

GL 100 Introduction to Geology (3) (N)

GL 111 Oceanography (3) (N)

GL 112 Weather & Climate (3) (N)

GR 110 Introductory German I (4) (HI)

HS 116 The United States since 1877 (3) (H)

MA 100 Pre-calculus (3) (N) (QM)

MA 103 Quantitative Methods (3) (Q)

MA 130 Calculus I (4) (N) (QM)

PACS 105 Intro. to Conflict Res. (3) (S)

PC 120 Astronomy (3) (N)

PL 105 Introduction to Logic (3) (H)

PL 106 Introduction to Ethics (3) (H) (CW)

PS 101 Intro. to Am Government (3) (S)

PS 102 Intro. to Intl. Politics (3) (SI)

PY 101 Introduction to Psychology (3) (S)

SO 101 Introduction to Sociology (3) (S)

SO 151 Introduction to Anthropology (3) (SI)

SP 110 Spanish I (4) (HI)

Appendix : Outreach
I. Introduction

Outreach programs are fundamental mission components for RFS. Outreach programs are the primary agents for communication of scientific findings and transmission of embodied values to non-science students and the general public. Outreach programs broaden the population served by the station and in doing so, increase support for not only the station, but the college as well. This support is manifested as increased student recruitment to the college, stronger working relationship with the Army Corps, greater alumni loyalty and contributions to the college and station, wider student support for station activities and improved name recognition for Juniata.

II. Past and Current Outreach Programming at RFS
Over the past 26 years, the RFS has served a wide variety of outreach functions. These functions include:

(1) Juniata non-academic uses: Retreats and club activities of Laughing Bush, Tri Beta, Caving Club, Campus Ministry, Conservation Club, Environmental Science Society and the Juniata Sugaring Club. RFS has also hosted picnics and meetings for departments, the faculty body and the college staff. The several hundred hours of volunteer labor provided annually by JC students is a measure of the value of the station to the campus community.

(2) K-12 environmental education: Programs that are conducted in some part by the station staff include the High School Outreach Program in Environmental Science, Science in Motion, Wet and Wild Voyages Program, Science Olympiad Nature Quest, Huntingdon County Envirothon and Ecomeet, Huntingdon County Water Quality Monitoring Network, State College gifted student camp, Chesapeake Bay Fund teacher training workshops and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation summer program for teachers. These programs vary in how they are funded. Some are done gratis, some are funded by soft money and some are revenue generators. External funding of K-12 activities is responsible for the majority of programming and infrastructure at RFS during the past five years. K-12 programming at RFS has also had demonstrable benefits for Juniata student recruitment.

Appendix : Outreach (continued)

(3) Juniata Alumni: Programs that are provided under the auspices of the College Alumni Office including reunion weekend and homecoming, and programs previously organized by the RFS office, and now organized by the Friends of Raystown Field Station, including maple sugaring and other activities. Alumni activities at RFS are an important source of revenue and volunteer labor for the station and are effective at creating ties between recent alumni and the college. This early tie is important in establishing sustained alumni support for the college.

(4) Environmental Education for the Community: These include general education and environmental recreation programs such as the RFS Summer Program Series for visitors to Raystown Lake, visits by scouting groups, and the Maple sugaring program. These programs have been financially subsidized by the station or run at break-even cost.

(5) Conferences, Workshops and others: Professional activities of organizations such as the PA Game Commission, the PA Fish and Boat Commission, the Corps of Engineers, Americorps, the PA Biological Survey, the Juniata Clean Water Partnership, the Juniata Watershed Wetland Monitoring Program, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, and the Institute for Bird Populations have been held at RFS. The station has also hosted other college classes from the University of Indiana and Dickinson College, among others. RFS charges rental fees for these uses.

III. Future Outreach Programming at RFS
RFS will work to maintain outreach activities at near current levels while focusing far greater effort on development of undergraduate education and research opportunities. Eventually, outreach will contribute approximately 10% to the overall station effort and will be planned in coordination with research and course work to avoid resource conflicts and to identify areas for collaboration. Furthermore, the current outreach activities will move more toward fee based usage and staffed in a greater degree by interns and alumni volunteers.
Growth in outreach activities will be based upon the availability of facilities after meeting the needs of undergraduate and research programs. Outreach activities will be either self-supporting through grants, user fees, and donations, or revenue generators.
Appendix : Outreach (continued)

Areas for new growth in outreach activities include:

A summer program for gifted high school students or Governor’s School
Globe teacher training workshops
Increased alumni usage under the auspices of the Friends of RFS
Increased conference and professional meeting activities.
A seminar series to educate the public about research projects at RFS
Increased collaboration between High School Science Outreach and research activities at RFS.
Enrollment of K-12 teachers and gifted high school students in summer undergraduate course offerings.

IV. Facilities considerations.
In order to reduce potential resource conflicts between outreach activities and undergraduate and research programs, many outreach activities could remain based out of the current RFS headquarters while undergraduate and research program could be based primarily out of a new facility. Furthermore, RFS may need to establish "zoning" for certain types of outreach activities to prevent excessive disturbance to research plots and scientific equipment.

Appendix : Research Plan

Full research plan isin the following document

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