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Students Collect Data, Plan Projects and Swing Over Rivers at Norway GLOBE Games


Students and teachers from seven countries "met and measured" for four days during the "GLOBE Learning Expedition" in Vang, Norway, Sept. 5 - 8. It was the largest GLOBE event of the year, with participants coming from Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Norway, Poland and the Czech Republic.

More than 350 students from grades six through 12 took GLOBE measurements in Hydrology, Atmosphere, Land Cover and Soils protocols. In addition to collecting data, GLE participants met to develop collaborative projects within the GLOBE framework.

Students also shared photographs of their countries' natural beauty, as well as songs and dances. Along with GLOBE measurements, students took hikes and swung on ropes to cross over rivers, an activity billed as "riverdance."

Vang and Rogne, two Norwegian schools that have consistently made the Chief Scientist's Honor Roll, hosted the event. Norway's Country Coordinator Karl Torstein Hetland hailed the schools' efforts. "The event was excellently organized by Vang and Rogne, with over 100 volunteers," he said.

"It has been a great experience to host the GLOBE Games this year, with so many happy students and teachers," Hetland continued. "Perhaps the most important thing we can do in the GLOBE Program is to let students meet and get to know each other, and at the same time focus on the environment."

For more information about the games, please visit the GLOBE Games Web site at:http://www.globegames.no/

16 January 2003


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