Albuquerque, NM - Santa Rosa Junior College

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FINAL PROGRAM - ASM Materials Camp-Teachers, Manzano High School, Albuquerque, NM, July 5-10,
2015
PD
Patricia Duda <pat.duda.52@gmail.com>
Thu 7/2/2015 5:18 PM
2015
Hello to all!
I just would like to welcome you to Albuquerque for next week along with Jeane!
A reminder: long pants and shoes that cover the foot are required to do labs.
We look forward to seeing you on Sunday evening at 6 pm at the Holiday Inn Express (Eubank and I-40).
If you cannot make that, we look forward to seeing you at 8 am on Monday morning. You may park in the lot on the east side of the school
(Wilson Stadium) after you pass the portables and come in to the Science Building. We will provide an mid-morning snack, so do have
breakfast/coffee before you arrive.
If for some reason you will be unable to make it, please let me know. If you have some difficulty or get lost, please feel free to call me on my
(Pat) cell phone: 505-440-3735,
See you soon!
Pat Duda
Master Teacher
and Margaret Showalter, Master Teacher
TEACHERS
July 5 - 10, 2015
(Albuquerque, NM)
Manzano High School
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
An endeavor of this magnitude requires the time, talents and efforts of countless individuals and organizations, too
many to list here. Any effort to acknowledge some will inevitably omit others who are very important and key to our
success. If we somehow missed you, please know it was unintentional, and your volunteer efforts are very important
to us.
Support for this program is provided by:
• Lockheed Martin/Sandia National Laboratories Corporation Foundation
• Los Alamos National Laboratory / Los Alamos National Security, LLC
• ASM Materials Education Foundation
Thomas G. Stoebe, FASM
Alton D. Romig, Jr., FASM
ASM Albuquerque Chapter
Albuquerque Public Schools
• Manzano High School
National Association of Corrosion Engineers
• NACE Foundation
PLEASE NOTE!
Workshop will be held at Manzano High School, Science “E” Wing, 12200 Lomas Blvd NE, Albuquerque, NM
87112
Sunday evening, July 5th we will meet in the Holiday Inn Express Inn for dinner and orientation at 6 p.m. Hotel
address: 10330 Hotel Ave., Albuquerque, NM 87123. (Phone number: 505/275-8900)
Camp will start promptly at 8 am each morning.
Out-of-town participants: Hotel provides continental breakfast. Meet in the lobby if carpooling. Prepare to
depart for Manzano High School at 7:45 each morning.
ORGANIZERS
ASM Albuquerque Chapter
Donald F. Susan
Materials Camp Chair
Jeffrey Rodelas
Chair
Lisa Deibler
Vice Chair
Deidre Hirschfeld
Chapter Council Representative
Mark F. Smith, FASM
Past President, ASM International
Trustee, ASM Materials Education Foundation
Executive Committee
ASM Los Alamos Chapter
Alice Smith
Chair
Albuquerque Public Schools
Jason Sanchez, Assistant Principal; Lynn Armijo, Secretary;
Eric Duran, Science Chair; Carrie Pippin, Science Teacher
Manzano High School
Donna Jernigan
Albuquerque High School (ret.)
ASM Materials Education Foundation
Jeane Deatherage
Administrator, Foundation Programs
Mary Anne Jerson
Administrative Assistant, Programs
Ginny Shirk
Executive Administrative Assistant
Nichol Campana
Director of Development & Operations
Master Teachers
Patricia Duda
Albuquerque Public Schools (retired)
Margaret Showalter
La Academia de Esperanza, Albuquerque
PROGRAM OVERVIEW
ASM Materials Camp-Teachers is a proven program that strengthens the curriculum in Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) at the secondary level. By introducing teachers to the engineering professions
through Materials Science, we influence students for years to come. Materials Science excites students' interest
because the student has everyday, hands-on experience with materials. Thus, materials topics are great motivators
in any engineering, technology or science course. Materials are also a very important and an integral part of the
manufacturing process.
This international program is offered by the ASM Materials Education Foundation, in fulfillment of its
Mission: "To excite young people in materials, science, and engineering careers." Since 2002, ASM Materials Camps
have introduced thousands of high school teachers to hands-on learning about the role of materials in our daily lives.
These week-long professional development workshops are held on college campuses, high schools and community
colleges throughout the United States and Canada during the summer. For teachers, this is an excellent opportunity
to re-visit science principles, do experiments and bring new lessons into the classroom.
The program is based on past experiences in the areas of curriculum development, teacher training and student
programs in Materials Science developed at the University of Washington and Edmonds Community College and
supported by the National Science Foundation’s Advanced Technology Education program. These programs have
demonstrated that Materials Science is an excellent tool to bring together academic and vocational instructors in a
common goal of exciting students about science, technology and engineering.
During this one-week workshop, teacher participants learn the basics of Materials Science Technology (MST) as
taught at the high school level. They work hands-on with metals, ceramics, polymers and composites, and develop a
greater appreciation for the importance of these materials to modern life. The teachers see how this heavily projectbased course excites students to learn science concepts as they complete projects of personal worth to them.
Whether teachers use the information and concepts as a basis for teaching their own MST course or merely infuse
the concepts into an existing science course to increase relevancy, they finish the week prepared to make some
important instructional changes as a result of their participation.
The camp is FREE for the teacher attendees. For their participation, they receive 4 Continuing Education Units (CEUs);
they can also opt for 2 graduate level credits. They are also provided with curricular tools in both digital (CD ROM)
format and print; supplies needed to replicate some of the classroom activities at their school; a one-year
membership in ASM International; and access to the time and talents of numerous local engineers and scientists.
Tentative Agenda
Morning
Sunday
Afternoon
6:00 Registration, Welcome at Holiday
Inn Express off the lobby
Orientation, Dinner (on camp)
Prepare pottery samples
Monday
8:00 Introductions, Course Logistics,
Graduate credit from UW, Field Trips,
Overview of the week
SOLIDS
~10:00 Snack
SOLIDS
12:00 Lunch SOLIDS
~ 3:00 Snack
SOLIDS
5:00 Return to hotel
Dinner on your own
Evening Open
Tuesday
8:00 Metals: Speaker
12:00 Lunch
METALS
~10:00 Snack
METALS
METALS
~3:00 snack METALS
Possible Optional field trip to Blacksmith
& Dinner (on camp)
Return to Hotel after 8:30
Wednesday
8:00 Polymers: Speaker
POLYMERS
~10:00 Snack
POLYMERS
12:00 Lunch
Possible Lunch speaker
POLYMERS
~3:00 Snack
POLYMERS
5:00 Return to hotel
Dinner on your own
Evening Open, Local Attractions:
Old Town
Tram Ride to top of Mountain
Casinos
Santa Fe (50 miles north)
Thursday
8:00 Ceramics: Speaker
GLASS AND CERAMICS
~10:00 Snack
GLASS AND CERAMICS
12:00 Lunch
Corrosion: Speaker
NACE CORROSION KITS
~3:00 Snack
NACE CORROSION KITS
4:00 Optional field trip to ¡Explora!,
Visit Old Town & Dinner (on own)
Return to Hotel about 8:30
Friday
8:00 Composites/Failure Analysis: Speaker
COMPOSITES and Raku
~10:30 Snack
COMPOSITES and Raku
1:00 Lab Clean UP
1:30 Lunch With “Graduation
Ceremony”
Dismiss by 3:00
MASTER TEACHERS
Pat Duda, Retired Science Teacher, Cibola High School; now enjoying substitute teaching. Pat has a Masters in
Analytical Chemistry and has been a certified teacher in the Albuquerque Public Schools since 1998. She has taught
Chemistry I, Chemistry II, and the Chemistry I – Materials Science curriculum she helped write, as well as PreEngineering Electronics and Astronomy. She obtained grants, including a large RASEM2 grant in 2006 to assist seven
APS teachers in five high schools to obtain equipment and materials for the Chemistry -Materials Science course. She
received the APS Superintendent’s Excellence in Teaching Award in 2005 and the ASM Kulkani Distinguished High
School Teacher Award in 2008. Beginning in 2003, she attended, helped teach, and is now a Master Teacher for the
ASM Materials Camp – Teachers. Pat had taught night school chemistry in various post-secondary schools, and had
worked in industry as a chemist in variety of jobs including analyzing gasoline and oil samples, analyzing aquatic
samples for heavy metals, participating in a program to remediate a chemical waste site for chromium, and studying
steam explosions for a nuclear reactor safety program.
Margaret Showalter has spent most of her 20+ years of teaching at the high school level, where she has taught in
traditional public schools, charter schools, and a private school. She also spent 2 years as an educator at ¡Explora!
Science Center. She has taught Chemistry I, Chemistry II, Chemistry with a Materials Science focus, Physics, and
Physical Science. She is currently teaching Integrated Science at La Academia De Esperanza, a charter school in
Albuquerque, NM. Margaret helped organize Albuquerque’s first ASM
Materials Camp for Teachers in 2003 and has been active with camp since that time. Margaret has a BS in Chemistry
from Mary Washington College, an MS in Chemistry from U. Florida, and a BA in Education from College of Santa Fe.
TEACHER PARTICIPANTS
First
Name
Last Name
School
1
Inez
Archuleta
2
Younes
Ataiiyan
Academy of Tades and
Technology
Santa Rosa Junior College
3
Cheryl
Babcock
4
Karen
5
City
State
Needs
Housing
Albuquerque
NM
Santa Rosa
CA
Carlos Rey E.S.
Albuquerque
NM
Balanquit
Albuquerque High
Albuquerque
NM
Rachel
Bartram
Jefferson Middle School
Albuquerque
NM
6
Kyle
Bridgewater
Menaul School
Albuquerque
NM
7
Hanh
Bui
NYC
NY
8
Miriam
Copeland
Williamsburg HS for Architecture
and Design
Hope Christian Middle Schools
Rio Rancho
NM
9
Jamie
Fischer
Highland Middle School
Hobbs
NM
Y
10
Ross
Fischer
Highland Middle School
Hobbs
NM
Y
11
S. Tamara
Gabrel
Mesa Alta Junior High
Bloomfield
NM
y
12
Terri
Haberl
Trinidad Middle School
Monte Vista
CO
Y
13
14
Benjamin
Vicky
Imbus
Klumpp
John Adams Middle School
Cibola High School
Albuquerque
Albuquerque
NM
NM
15
Lanika
Rodrigues
School of Dreams Academy
Albuquerque
NM
16
Laura
Larisch
Aldo Leopold Charter School
Silver City
NM
17
David
Mains
Menaul School
Albuquerque
NM
18
Jena
Nix
Highland Middle School
Hobbs
NM
19
Anna
Phillips
Cibola High School
Albuquerque
NM
20
Vivian
Quintana
Albuquerque High School
Albuquerque
NM
21
Robert
Salazar
Albuquerque
NM
22
Valerie
Scott
Native American Community
Academy
Miyamura High
Gallup
NM
Y
23
Sandra
Smith
Capitan High School
Capitan
NM
Y
24
Chris
Spurlin
Annunciation Catholic School
Albuquerque
NM
25
Marissa
Triebel
Hope Christian School
Albuquerque
NM
26
Monika
Tso
Miyamura High School
Tohatchi
NM
27
Samantha
Yu
Hope Christian School
Albuquerque
NM
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
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