DEI Task Force

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Task Force

Important: The GLOBE DEI Task Force has transitioned into the GLOBE Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Working group. For all current information related to DEI at GLOBE, check out the GLOBE DEI Working Group page.

With the support of GLOBE Program Sponsors from NASA and NSF, in the fall of 2019 the GLOBE DEI Task Force was formed with the goal of creating a GLOBE statement and implementation plan on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. In February 2020 the group met in Boulder, Colorado for a DEI workshop, and to begin working on these statements. This group has met monthly ever since to collaboratively produce the statements shown below. These statements and action plan were presented to the GLOBE Community at the 2020 Virtual Meeting. A recording of this presentation can be found on GLOBE's Annual Meeting videos page
 

DEI Task Force Members

 

Shadrack Agyiri (Ghana) Jill Karsten (USA)
Jennifer Bourgeault (USA) Julie Malmberg (USA)
Katie Chapman (USA) Josette Neal-De-Stanton (USA)
Kimberly Davis (USA) David Padgett (USA)
Mindi DePaola (USA) Richard Parsons (USA)
Francis Emralino (Philippines) Marina Pavlic (Croatia)
Wrayna Fairchild (USA) Ana Prieto (Argentina)
Trena Ferrell (USA) Nate Raynor (USA)
Rosalba Giarratano (USA) Juan Felipe Restrepo Mesa (Colombia)
Kate Goss (USA) Elena Sparrow (USA)
Nikitah Imani (USA) Josephine Joy Tolentino (Philippines)

Action Plan (detailed):

  • Create DEI Working Group
  • Administer DEI Assessments
  • Build a DEI Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)
  • Develop DEI based Resources
  • Establish DEI Training Opportunities
  • Form DEI Supportive Partnerships
  • Find funding for DEI
  • Communicate DEI Initiatives

To see translations of the draft DEI Definitions, Mission, Vision and overview of the Draft Action Plan, click here.


Recent DEI-Related Blog Posts

 

Asset Publisher

null Porpoises in the San Francisco Bay – an example of how a small change can have big results!

Sometimes in a rapidly changing world, it is difficult to see the effects that small changes in human lifestyle can have on not only climate, but on ecosystems.  Various countries and international organizations are working to pass legislation to ensure change.  One such case of legislation working is being observed in the San Francisco Bay – the return of harbor porpoises.  This was recently reported in the QUEST biology blog.

The map below shows the location of the San Francisco Bay, marked by the bubble with an A, from Google. 

Map of San Francisco Bay

In 1972, the Clean Water Act was passed, working to improve the quality of water bodies within the United States by regulating the pollutants that were dumped into the ocean.  The quality of the water in the Bay began diminishing in the early 1900’s.  During World War II, the San Francisco Bay became a large war time port and ship building center.   By the time of the 1950’s and 1960’s, the Bay was so polluted that it literally smelled like raw sewage.

So when and why exactly did the porpoises leave the Bay?   The answer isn’t exactly clear.  From bone records found in the Bay, porpoises have made this location a home for hundreds of years.  As late as the 1930’s, there were reports of porpoise sightings.  But in the last 70-80 years, these reports were fewer and far between. Approximately three years ago, the first porpoises were spotted returning to the Bay.  Since then, Jonathan Stern,  a whale researcher from San Francisco State University who was featured in the QUEST article, and other researchers have been looking to find the answers to why they left in the first place, and what has caused them to return after so many years.   According to Stern, even though the Clean Water Act was passed in 1972, it takes awhile for the food supply to return, and even longer for predators of that food to return.

Harbor porpoises

Harbor porpoises as seen from the Golden Gate Bridge. (Photo: William Keener/Golden Gate Cetacean Research). From the QUEST Science blog
 

While it isn’t easy to collect data from such a large body of water, the same types of phenomena can be observed in local streams and rivers that many GLOBE schools are visiting to record data.  The Hydrology Chapter of the GLOBE Teacher’s Guide has quite a few protocols that students could use to examine the quality of the streams and its effect on life.

For instance, a change in water pH, which can be collected through the pH protocol, can affect the types of macroinvertibrates found in the water body.  This in turn has an effect on the food chain – whether that be through an increase or decrease in food supply.  This would be an interesting research study to do over the course of many years - following local legislation and news articles on water quality, monitoring the water as a GLOBE school, and seeing if there are any changes found.

To read more information about the return of the San Francisco Bay harbor porpoises, head on over to the QUEST science blog.  If you’re a GLOBE school and are participating in any of the hydrology protocols, we’d love to hear from you and your findings!  Leave a comment here or email us!