Educational experience of a lifetime
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Mike Sciacca
There were no lions, tigers or bears in sight. All Jeff Goodman had to
contend with were lemurs, crocodiles, boa constrictors and scorpions.
Goodman began his senior year of high school a month earlier than most
of his fellow classmates at Edison High School. It began with an
educational trip to the island of Madagascar off the southeast coast of
Africa. He went with the environmental group Earthwatch Institute, and
spent two weeks in Ampijoroa National Park working with noted biologist
Luke Dollar of Columbia University. Goodman was the lone high school
student among a group of 10 adults, mostly teachers from the U.S. and
Britain, who went to the southeast coast of Africa to observe lemurs,
capture and radio collar native carnivores -- called fossas -- that prey
upon the endangered lemurs and record valuable scientific data.
“It was an amazing expedition,” Goodman said. “I got to see a region
of the world that normally, I would not.”
The 17-year-old endured a 28-hour trip to reach Madagascar. He needed
a special visa, shots and proof of receiving a yellow fever inoculation
just to be able to enter the country. Once there, he lived in a tent
under a hut made of palm branches in a region that had no gas or
electricity and no running water. They lived mostly on “lots of rice and
beans” and drank purified water and Coca Cola, which, Goodman said, was
bottled in Mozambique.
“It was well worth it and so educational,” he said. “I was in an
outdoor classroom learning about things that are so different from our
part of the world.”
The mission of the Earthwatch Institute is to promote sustainable
conservation of natural resources and cultural heritage by creating
partnerships between scientists, educators and the general public through
three primary objectives: research, education and conservation.
Founded in Boston, Mass. the institute has offices in England,
Australia and Japan and boasts 50,000 members and supporters worldwide.
Some 3,500 of its members volunteer their time and skills to work with
120 research scientists each year on Earthwatch field research projects
in more than 50 countries around the world.
“I’m pretty much interested in the social sciences,” he said. “The
trip to Madagascar was something that I figured I wouldn’t get to do
again, especially now that I’m going to college next year. I’d advise a
trip like this to any student but just make sure that you have the time
and resources to do so and pick an expedition that interests you.”
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