CENTER VALLEY, Pa. — Penn State University’s CHANCE program was founded in 2004 at Penn State Lehigh Valley to prepare global-minded citizens who understand the importance of restoring and protecting the biodiversity of our planet's ecosystems, and who are willing to address the challenges of today, such as energy, air, food, water and climate change, through their efforts. CHANCE stands for Connecting Humans and Nature through Conservation Experiences.
The CHANCE program was founded by Jacqueline S. McLaughlin, associate professor of biology at Penn State Lehigh Valley. Recently, McLaughlin won the prestigious 2017 Higher Education Environmental Educator of the Year Award from the North American Association of Environmental Education (NAAEE) for her work with the CHANCE program. She will receive her award at their 46TH Annual Conference in Puerto Rico on Oct. 21.
“Conservation biology is the scientific study of the phenomena that affect the maintenance, loss and restoration of biological diversity in our world’s varied ecosystems. CHANCE places students at the front line to research such phenomena. To do this, CHANCE creates unique learning environments which include short-term international field courses and online research modules,” McLaughlin said.
Throughout the years, CHANCE has traveled to many different countries around the world to conduct biological and ecological research, including China, Costa Rica, Cuba and Panama. During the program’s most recent field course, students and teachers focused on conservation and the sustainability of select ecosystems in western Cuba.
Participants in the CHANCE Cuba field program were required to carry out pre-trip, online assignments before venturing into the field to learn from local government experts, university faculty and National Park biologists about ongoing Cuban conservation efforts and environmental policies as they explored the biodiversity of the rainforests of Sierra del Rosario; wetlands, mangroves, forests and coral reefs of Guanahacabibes Peninsula; and farmlands of Viñales. While in the field, students also worked in groups to research a specific environmental sustainability issue confronting this developing nation and the world. They experienced many of Cuba’s cultural offerings while in the field, including jazz and dance performances, art museums, a walking tour of historical Old Havana, tobacco cigar farms, and meals in paladares (restaurants run in private homes).
A conservation-based, service-learning project on nesting sea turtles was also performed in conjunction with biologists from Guanahacabibes National Park as part of their Research, Monitoring and Management Program.
“Students would clean up a secluded turtle rookery from plastic pollution in the afternoon, then dress in black from head-to-toe and wear their head lamps equipped with red light at night in order to assist in turtling efforts — patrolling beaches to deter poachers, assisting turtles with the nesting process, identifying and tagging turtles, counting eggs and marking nests. This is where students were transformed into conservationists. They knew that they were helping endangered species fight extinction.” said McLaughlin.