Partners collaborate to create T3 success
August 25, 2023
When partners collaborate to create meaningful experiences for students to learn and make a difference in their communities, epic things can happen. As was the case with the 2023 Teaching Through Technology summer program.
Thirty-seven high school students from across Alaska participated in the six-week residential program. During the intensive weeks, the students learned about and addressed problems pertaining to various areas of science, including mariculture 鈥 the farming of marine organisms for food and other products in enclosed or open sections of the ocean 鈥 climate change impacts, earth science, and energy.
Ten of the students signed up for the energy strand of the program. ACEP worked with its partners to help those students understand the unique energy challenges facing remote communities, including those in the Northwest Arctic Borough.
Perhaps the best way to understand a problem is to see it firsthand. The students and staff spent nine days in Kotzebue and Noatak. They met with locals, community partners, and experts, to experience life and the challenges facing these communities 鈥 from extreme transportation challenges and energy costs, to changing permafrost and a limited workforce. The students learned how these factors impact the communities and how experts are developing solutions.
Matt Bergan, project manager for , led students on a tour of the renewable energy farm while contractors were installing the latest batch of panels in the solar array.
鈥淚t is a dollar a pound,鈥 Bergan explained, referring to the shipping cost of the solar panels being installed. 鈥淎nd on top of that, we can only get barges in for about two months a year, July and August.鈥
While in Noatak, students met with Paul Walton, manager of the water treatment plant, and Una Edwardson from . Walton showed the students where the plant foundation was cracking due to the permafrost thawing beneath the building. 鈥淲e have to run refrigerant through a loop of pipes underneath the building to prevent further permafrost loss!鈥
The thawing permafrost along the banks of the Noatak river has also caused the river to become both wider and shallower, drastically limiting barge transportation to the village. This means that diesel used for home heating and electricity generation has to be flown in, resulting in some of the highest energy costs in the U.S.
The students spent their final three weeks of the program at 51风流官网, working with experts to develop and present possible solutions to the energy problems facing rural Alaska.
Tom Marsik from ACEP, the , and the worked with students on building construction and thermal efficiency. Ben Loeffler, a research professional at ACEP and Pacific Marine Energy Center co-director, talked about challenges facing hydrokinetic development in the Arctic. Concerning renewable energy generation, Rich Str枚mberg from ACEP鈥檚 solar research team shared the physics, practices, and ethics pertaining to photovoltaic technology.
It made a big impact on the students to learn about the history of Kotzebue and Noatak and reflect on the challenges that village residents face, then learn from ACEP researchers about efforts to seek solutions.
鈥淲hat life is like for those that live [in Kotzebue and Noatak], and what problems they face鈥ven though my life is very different from the people we talked to, I was still able to find some similarities that let me go, 鈥楬ey, I know what that feels like,鈥欌 said Marais Anderson, a T3 student from Fairbanks.
鈥淪o, to me, the most important thing I took away from our field week was a deeper understanding of the people we are trying to help and the problems they face.鈥
The 2023 T3 Summer Program was made possible with funding from the ; an initiative, the ; the State of Alaska program; and with support from the .
For more information about the 51风流官网 T3 program or T3 summer program, please contact
George Reising at gbskrabareising@alaska.edu.