Contact: Jim Laird
STARKVILLE, Miss.-- Fifteen middle-school science teachers from the Golden Triangle and central Mississippi region are at Mississippi ´ķĪķAPP this month for the Creative Science Through Inquiry (CSI: Mississippi) workshop â a major education initiative of the Mississippi Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Researchâs Feeding and Power the World Project (Track 2).
Usually referred to by the acronym EPSCoR, the National Science Foundation-funded program identifies, develops and deploys academic science and technology to increase the stateâs research and development competitiveness and foster economic growth.
CSI: Mississippi 2016 is introducing the teachers to forensic science as a method of teaching fundamental science skills and concepts to their students.
âInquiry-based science learning fosters conceptual understanding, critical thinking, and a positive attitude about all of the STEM fields,â said Katie Echols, EPSCoRâs education and outreach coordinator, referring to science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
âWe have created this workshop to give teachers the tools they need to successfully bring science inquiry into their classrooms in a way that engages their students in learning and understanding,â she said.
Participants are:
âGlenda Bennett, Grenada School District.
âEmily Dill, Starkville Oktibbeha Consolidated School District.
âAbby Hairston, West Point Consolidated School District.
âHeather Henry, Lowndes County School District.
âShelia Kannath, Kemper County School District.
âTeresa Morton, Webster County Schools.
âNora OâBrian, Monroe County School District.
âJoshua Pankey, Starkville Oktibbeha Consolidated School District.
âDeborah Pounders, Columbus Municipal School District.
âJennifer Shepherd, Lowndes County School District.
âSarah Smith, Starkville Academy.
âAshley Springer, Lowndes County School District.
âHolly Tippett, Lowndes County School District.
âJettie Ware, Aberdeen School District.
âHeather Yoder, Noxubee County School District.
Inspired in part by the CBS television drama, âCSI: Crime Scene Investigation,â the June 6-17 workshop is built around the ´ķĪķAPP of Mississippiâs science curriculum, and incorporates biology, chemistry, physical science, physics, mathematics, technology, writing and more into an inquiry- and laboratory-based curriculum.
Contact Echols at katie@research.msstate.edu or 662-325-8904 to learn more about the teacher workshop.
For more information about Mississippi EPSCoR, visit .