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UNH
brings nanotechnology to local schools
Institute takes teachers to the cutting edge
DURHAM—University
of New Hampshire researchers brought local elementary, middle and high
school educators to the cutting edge of science last week at the K-12
Nanotechnology Teacher Institute.
Two dozen
New Hampshire teachers spent the week learning from researchers with the
Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing. “This is a chance for K-12
teachers to learn about nanotechnology in general and get an in-depth
look at the research initiatives here at UNH,” said CHN Associate
Director and associate chemistry professor Glen Miller, who organized
the event with CHN’s K-12 Outreach Coordinator Susan Greenberg.
“That way, they can teach their students about the latest developments
in this rapidly developing field.”
During the
week, the teachers learned about what advances nanotechnology might bring
to medicine from Jerome Claverie, a research associate professor with
UNH’s Materials Science Program who is developing “nanocaplets”
for the oral delivery of drugs such as insulin. They also got a tour of
assistant physics professor Karsten Pohl’s lab and the scanning
tunneling microscope he uses in the development of “nanotemplates.”
“Kids
today are way ahead of the kids when I was in high school—you have
to spend your summers catching up,” said Cathy Little, a chemistry
teacher at Pinkerton Academy in Derry. “This will help us to help
our students to choose a career.”
The teachers
worked with Dawn Meredith of the UNH Physics Department and Barbara Hopkins
of UNH’s Joan and James Leitzel Center for Mathematics, Science,
and Engineering Education to begin the process of bringing that knowledge
back to their classrooms. Over the next four years, the center will work
with interested teachers to fully develop, implement and evaluate those
curricular activities.
“I
think my students are definitely going to be working in a field that we
don’t even know yet,” said Linda Bilodeau, a third grade teacher
at Peter Woodbury Elementary School in Bedford. “If we don’t
open their eyes today, where are they going to go?”
Nanotechnology
is incredibly small—between the size of a molecule and a red blood
cell—but it’s expected to have a big economic impact—generating
$1 trillion annually by 2015, according to the National Science Foundation.
Someday many of the students in these teachers’ classrooms could
be employed by the industry.
The teachers
heard about the social and ethical dimensions of this emerging field from
Ken Geiser of UMass Lowell. “I think it’s interesting for
kids to see the evolution of this technology because they’ll be
around to see it, and how the government deals with it” said Rye
Junior High School science teacher Sheila Adams.
Arthur Greenberg,
UNH professor of chemistry and former dean of the College of Engineering
and Physical Sciences, spoke about the differences between science fiction
like Michael Crichton’s Prey and reality. “This needs to be
talked about in the classroom with our students so that after they read
a book like Prey, they realize that this is not the way the world is going,”
said Spaulding High School science teacher Pat Sukduang.
Injecting
nanotechnology into the lesson plan will make science more fun for their
students, according to the participating teachers. “When I go back
and mention nanotechnology, their eyes are going to light up and they’re
going to say, ‘What do you know about it?’” said Laconia
High School science teacher Jason Lacroix.
The Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing, which includes
UNH, Northeastern University and the UMass Lowell, was created last fall
with a $12.4 million, five-year grant from the National Science Foundation.
Its goal is to develop general tools for manufacturing at the nano scale
and apply them to two specific products in the next five years: biosensors
that can be implanted in the body for early detection of diseases and
nanotube memory chips that can store much more information than conventional
silicon chips.
PHOTO CAPTION
SEPARATING SCIENCE
FROM FICTION: CHN
Associate Director Glen Miller explains to local science teachers why
commercial applications of nanotechnology will never be achieved by moving
one atom at a time.
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