Wisconsin Rapids Teacher Wins McAuliffe Fellowship
From the DPI Bulletin
Martha M. Kronholm, a fifth- and sixth-grade teacher at Grove Elementary
School in Wisconsin Rapids, will engage her students in active learning
through research into dragons and termites thanks to a national Christa
McAuliffe Fellowship.
Kronholms proposal From Komodo Dragons to Termite Emissions:
Engaged Learning in New Technologies will take her to Indonesia
and the Kalahari desert and will connect her with students back in Wisconsin
Rapids via computer, digital camera, and electronic mail. Kronholm will
be a principal investigator for an expedition to Flores Island in Indonesia
to track Komodo dragons, which face extinction due to loss of habitat
to human settlements. In the spring of 1999, she will work as scientist
for the research project in South Africa into how termite emissions contribute
to harmful greenhouse gasses.
Science should be tied to real life issues and problem solving,
Kronholm explained in her proposal. The two projects look at humans
impact upon the environment and the environments impact on humans.
Her research will be the foundation for student inquiry and hands-on projects
that use technology to create multimedia presentations for the World Wide
Web.
This proposal will impact my classroom of 20 fifth- and sixth-graders,
the 350 other students in my school, the 6,000 other students and 450
teachers in our school district, and countless others. The Internet opens
the world to the classroom and the classroom to the world, Kronholm
said.
She was selected for the 1998 Christa McAuliffe Fellowship based on her
past professional development, the proposal she submitted to the competition,
the transportability of that project, and letters of support.
Kronholm holds advanced degrees that emphasized environmental and science
education from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Ill., and the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Her bachelors degree was
from the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. Her outreach to educators
and the scientific community through workshops, presentations, and publications
is wide-ranging. She also has received numerous professional honors.
The Christa McAuliffe Fellowship program was established in memory of
Christa McAuliffe, the first teacher in space who died in the Challenger
shuttle explosion in 1986. It provides up to $34,210 to teachers with
eight or more years of experience to use for various study, research,
or academic improvement projects. The Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction
administers the program.
Posted May 1, 1998