Schools

Danbury Students, Teachers, Honored for Environmental Education

WCSU, Danbury Family Learning Center and Danbury Public Schools collaborate on the program.

Finding Our Way award winners from Bethel, Danbury and New Fairfield are flanked by the program administrators. (l-r) Program Director WCSU Professor of Biological and Environmental Sciences Dr. Theodora Pinou; Lasya Priya Vadlavani, Shristi Ramakrishnan, both from Danbury; Braedi Caraher from New Fairfield; Abby Riolo and Petra Cirella, both from Bethel; Noah Barnes, Naomi Barnes, Sharleen Huaman, Casey Ramos, Sahil Patel, from Danbury; and WCSU Program Assistant Carol Ball.

DANBURY, CT — Finding Our Way, a Danbury-based environmental science, technology, engineering and math skills education program for middle schoolers and their families, has announced the WCSU NOAA B-WET Stewardship Award winners, recognizing the work done by some of the program’s participants.

WCSU, Danbury Family Learning Center and Danbury Public Schools collaborate on the program, which offers 30 seventh-grade middle school students and their families a yearlong integrated environmental community stewardship experience focused on New England watersheds

Find out what's happening in Danburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Shristi Ramakrishnan, of Danbury, won the first place award for her in-depth research into the use of microbeads in consumer products and the harm they cause to the environment and wildlife. Ramakrishnan studied labels of skin products and initiated an email writing campaign to CEOs of major retailers, to the companies marketing these products and to Danbury School principals asking for change. CVS responded detailing its efforts to remove microbead products from stores, and Beiersdorf personal-care company explained its efforts to remove microbeads from its skin care lines. Ramakrishnan created posters about microbeads for the Danbury Public Schools and will deliver a presentation about microbeads to 8th graders at Broadview Middle School.

Sahil Patel, of Danbury, explored and took action that addressed a range of watershed stewardship issues, including organizing a group clean-up at Candlewood Lake and North Ridge, creating a website to spread awareness about pollution that features his blog, inventing a method to stop water pollution worldwide, and creation of posters and images to raise awareness of water pollution issues. His efforts earned him the second place award.

Find out what's happening in Danburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

New Fairfield resident Braedi Caraher, recipient of a third place award, undertook Frogwatch training to become an official frog-watcher. Three nights a week, she visits the same pond and listens for frogs, logging her data into a national database.

Abby Riolo and Petra Cirella, of Bethel, also earned third place honors for their combined work detailing the environmental impact of a new housing development planned for their town. Their Powerpoint presentation, revealing the projected effects of 25 acres of trees being cut and animals and helpful bacteria displaced, was presented to the Bethel First Selectman and members of the town Planning and Zoning board.

An honorable mention award was presented to Mia Dannucci, of New Fairfield, who researched watershed protection and created a brochure she delivered to her neighbors about ways to safeguard the local water supply. Dannucci’s focus was on pesticide reduction and recommended alternatives such as encouraging birds and bats to control the insect population.

Two Danbury Public School Teachers also were recognized, Joy Pires and Jeff Brewster from Broadview Middle School. Pires received the 2018 Finding Our Way Classroom Engagement Award for her implementation of hands-on water conservation activities learned during her program training into her classroom lessons. Activities included measuring and monitoring in-school personal water consumption, and teaching students about cellular respiration through the biodiversity found in different types of mud.

Brewster received the 2018 WCSU NOAA B-WEST Stewardship Classroom Award for his hands-on classroom activity of growing and releasing fish in Kettletown Park. He is a strong advocate for watershed conservation and associated habitat protection, and the anadromous fish training activity he experienced in this program helped him bridge his love of the environment with the priorities of the B-WET program and the new Danbury Public Schools NGSS-aligned curriculum.

Finding Our Way partners with WCSU’s Weather Center, The Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation and the Atlantic Marine Conservation Society to study the life cycle and behavior of organisms that rely on the watershed for resources. It also works with the NOAA Fisheries Lab in Milford and FirstLight Power Resources to learn about sustainable clean energy such as biofuel and hydroelectric power, and to examine the cost and benefit of such resources in terms of impact on local fish populations and associated habitats.

Photo: Peggy Stewart

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.