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For Immediate Release
July 16, 2003
Contact:
Sarita Nair
617-618-2164
snair@edc.org
NEW ONLINE TOOL FOR EDUCATORS OFFERS GENDER-FAIR RESOURCES
NEWTON, MA – Suppose you need a lesson on
the hydrosphere for sixth graders. You need it to last 45 minutes, and
you'd like to include an interactive component on the water cycle, two
minutes of video, a short essay for students to read, and a take-home
activity. Ideally, you'd like to highlight the contributions of female
hydrophysicists. You type all these requests into a search engine, click
on Submit, and instantly the resources are delivered to your computer.
Sound far-fetched? Not anymore, with the launch of the Gender & Science
Digital Library.
The Gender & Science Digital Library (GSDL) is a vast on-line collection
of gender-fair resources in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
Part of the National Science Foundation's major initiative to create,
organize, and install high-quality education resources onto the Internet,
the GSDL was developed by the Gender, Diversities & Technology Institute
at Education Development Center. Much like a "bricks and mortar" library,
this 'virtual' library catalogs and organizes books, articles, videos,
curricula, and software, but it goes a step further by evaluating each
one, presenting a short description, and offering instant access, 24
hours a day.
"The GSDL will pull together materials from all over the world
and offer instantaneous dissemination," said Sarita Nair, project
director. "And it won't be just a repository of ideas; it is also
designed to generate new ideas," Nair said. For example, the digital
library will feature a series of forums and discussions where users can
exchange information and thoughts on the materials in the collection.
"The GSDL was created to help educators integrate gender-equitable
instruction into their classrooms," said EDC's Katherine Hanson,
director of the Gender, Diversities & Technology Institute, and principal
investigator on the project. "Despite some narrowing of the gender
gap in scientific careers, girls continue to be underrepresented in upper-level
science courses in high school and college, and we need to increase the
general perception that girls and women can and do play an important
role within the sciences," Hanson said.
The Gender & Science Digital Library was developed in response to a growing need for better
access, dissemination, and use of the many high quality gender-fair science materials that have been developed over
the past few decades. The GSDL is funded by the National Science Foundation
as part of its National STEM Digital Library program.
The
Gender, Diversities & Technology Institute is a global forum
that explores race, ethnicity, economic status, disability, and sexual
orientation in how we learn and work. Its research and programs seek
to humanize technology in its conceptualization, design, process, use,
and impact, while addressing the power and potential of technology within
education systems; gender violence; economic self-sufficiency; and human
development. The Institute is based at Education Development Center, Inc.
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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