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Scientists Teach Region about Climate

Abstract

IMPACT. 1: The Climate Team has educated more than 34,000 people representing 500+ organizations from governmental agencies, academia, non-profits, private industry, and the legislature through its flagship Global Change, Local Impact monthly webinar series and archives. The team is considered the go-to organization for Great Lakes climate information. -- 2. Agencies such as the National Park Service and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, as well as secondary schools and informal education facilities use the team's programming as teaching tools for their climate-related programs. -- 3. The team launched the first and only online regional repository for Great Lakes climate information at greatlakesclimate.com in 2013.OSU PARTNERS: Ohio Sea Grant & Stone Laboratory; Office of Research; Ohio Supercomputer Center; OSU Extension; Department of Agricultural, Environmental, and Development Economics; School of Environment and Natural Resources; OSU Extension Watershed Program; Byrd Polar Research Center; School of Earth Sciences; Carbon, Water, and Climate Program; Department of Geography; Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal BiologyCOMMUNITY PARTNERS: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Cuyahoga County (Ohio) Board of Health; Ohio Department of Health; Great Lakes Commission; Great Lakes Landscape Conservation Cooperative; Great Lakes Regional Water Program; Great Lakes Sea Grant Network; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); NOAA National Sea Grant Program; NOAA Coastal Services Center; NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory; Ohio Coastal Training Program; The Nature Conservancy; University of Wisconsin; University of Michigan; Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts; Cleveland MetroparksPRIMARY CONTACT: Jill Jentes Banicki ([email protected])The Ohio State University Climate Change Outreach Team is a multi-departmental initiative within the university to help localize the climate change issue for Ohioans and Great Lakes residents. Created in 2008, the team works with university faculty to create outreach tools to get climate research information out to the public. Through such tools as a webinar series, informal educational displays, and secondary education curricula, the team collaborates with experts from around the country to teach the public about issues and impacts the region could face with a changing climate

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