Culturally Situated Community Sensing Project Updates

Categories:  Chris Shing, Culturally Situated Community Sensing, Louis Gutierrez
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by Kirk Jalbert

 

Photo Credit: Kirk Jalbert


Navajo Nation Energy Industry

By on August 23, 2011

A primary characteristic of life on the Navajo Nation is the tenuous relationship to the long resident energy extraction industry. Coal, oil, natural gas, uranium, and other resources have, some contend, benefited, the Navajo people and their tribal government. Yet at the same time it has detrimentally impacted their way of life and the health …

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Photo Credit: Kirk Jalbert


Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals

By on August 23, 2011

In late July 2011 I attended the Summer Scholars workshop hosted by the Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals (ITEP) based out of Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, AZ. This was a week long workshop attended by 30 middle and high school students from across the Navajo Reservation. As a vehicle for discussing climate change, myself …

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Photo Credit: Kirk Jalbert


Diné Environmental Institute

By on August 23, 2011

In early July 2011 I visited the first of two field sites to conduct educational workshops using the RPI Community Sensor systems at DEI. The Diné Environmental Institute is an NSF funded research group at Diné College on the Navajo Reservation. Diné College is a tribal university system with reservation locations throughout New Mexico and Arizona. …

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Photo Credit: Kirk Jalbert


Conflicting opinions on open source

By on August 23, 2011

During the development of the RPI sensor in collaboration with the MDL team Chris, Louis and I ran into a rather serious problem over differing opinions on how copyright should be applied to the completed software and hardware. While the Statement of Work stated that the project would be fully open source as seen in …

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Photo Credit: Kirk Jalbert


Building the RPI Community Sensor

By on August 23, 2011

In the Fall of 2010 I began a collaborative project with two fellow graduate students, Louis and Chris, to design an open-source modular environmental sensing device. This would be used in educational workshops, but also to facilitate conversations about how environmental monitoring could be conducted low-cost as well as run without a base requirement of …

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Culturally Situated Community Sensing

Categories:  Culturally Situated Community Sensing
Tags: , , ,

As part of the GK-12 Triple Helix program at Rensselaer fellows, Chris Shing and Louis Gutierrez, teacher Liz Franklin and graduate student Kirk Jalbert are working to make sensor technology and environmental studies a theme of the middle schools’ science curriculum.  By combining sensors for various applications they hope to be able to cover a lot of topics, ranging from measuring the temperature of a beaker to observing air pollution patterns, in an attempt to link the research world, the classroom and the community.

Kirk Jalbert’s Community Sensing Workshops solicit conversation around communal responsibility and social justice issues related to environmental monitoring.

Louis Gutierrez’ Community Sensing and indoor air quality in Langui, Peru