ROCKVILLE, Md. -- The American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB) has named 12 plant biology researchers as science education mentors for the Planting Science Master Plant Science Team (MPST).
Planting Science is an educational and research resource that brings together middle and high school students, plant scientists, and teachers in a virtual learning environment. Students engage in hands-on plant investigations while working with peers at their schools and online with scientist mentors to build collaborations and enhance their understanding of plant science.
Members of the MPST are graduate students and postdoctoral researchers active in all areas of plant science research with an interest in participating in outreach. MPST mentors help middle and high school students and their classroom teachers to develop practical, insightful research skills while investigating the plant themes and teaching modules provided by the Planting Science program.
More than 9,000 middle and high school students, 2,500 research teams, and teachers in 34 states have experienced the brand of scientific inquiry offered by Planting Science . Unlike the repetitive lab exercises with predicted outcomes common in many classrooms and textbooks, Planting Science offers the real world of ambiguity, messy data, and scientific creativity. In its first five years, the website welcomed 1.6 million visitors.
Since becoming an official partner in the Planting Science project in 2006, ASPB has supported more than 30 early career plant scientists as MPST mentors. In fact, the Society has recently expanded its support, enabling ASPB to support a larger number of MPST mentors.
Congratulations to these 2011 MPST mentors:
This past spring, the journal Science selected Planting Science to receive a Science Prize for Online Resources in Education, also known as a SPORE Award. The program was also honored with a 2011 Power of A Silver Award from the American Society of Association Executives.
Planting Science represents a collaboration of 14 scientific societies with an interest in plant science with additional educational, user, and industry partners. Support for Planting Science has been provided to the Botanical Society of America by the National Science Foundation and the Monsanto Fund.
Additional information about Planting Science is available at http://www.plantingscience.org/ .
ASPB is a professional scientific society, headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, devoted to the advancement of the plant sciences worldwide. With a membership of nearly 5,000 plant scientists from throughout the United States and more than 50 other nations, the Society publishes two of the most widely cited plant science journals: The Plant Cell and Plant Physiology . For more information about ASPB, please visit http://www.aspb.org/ . Also follow ASPB on Facebook at facebook.com/myASPB and on Twitter @ASPB .