UC grad students bring geosciences to Northside Farmers Market

Monthly market experiments let little ones get hands-on with science

Families bring their children to Cincinnati’s Northside Farmers Market every Wednesday, rain or shine, for the vibrant social hub and healthy, and affordable foods.

This year, a group of University of Cincinnati graduate students has added a new feature to the 20-year-old market tradition — Science Harvest, an outreach initiative designed to share science with local communities through conversation and hands-on learning activities.

One of these scientists is Meg Corcoran, a UC geoscience graduate and postdoctoral fellow with UC’s Center for Public Engagement with Science, who helped launch Science Harvest last October.

“We do get a mix of community members here at the market,” says Corcoran, pointing out the draw of the outreach program.

Fresh veggies and produce at the Northside Farmer's Market. Credit/Hannah White

Fresh veggies and produce at the Northside Farmer's Market. Photo/Hannah White

The Center for Public Engagement with Science, operated through UC’s College of Arts and Sciences, works to foster an interactive relationship between science and the public. The center accomplishes this goal by promoting science dialogue and offering innovative forms of scientific engagement through partnerships and experiments.

Previous community activities have included science talks and a lecture series at the Mercantile Library in downtown Cincinnati.

For Corcoran and her fellow scientist Hans Laake, a 2019 UC geosciences graduate who is working on his master’s of geoscience, the goal is to have meaningful conversations about geosciences with members of the community through fun means.

“We bring different components of whatever activity so we can engage with kids and have a hands-on activity where they can get their hands dirty and try some science out,” Corcoran says. “We just try to bring a wide assortment of different activities that all show the same thing.”

Children engage with a colorful experiment on sediment coring. Credit/Hannah White

Children engage with a colorful experiment on sediment coring. Credit/Hannah White

With UC’s department of geology renamed to geosciences, the pair of scientists hope to aid the center's mission by showing community members the all-encompassing nature of geoscience, well beyond rocks and mud.

“I think a lot of people think of rocks when they think of geology, but really, geology is the study of Earth. We learn about climate, the ocean, circular motion, biology,” Laake says.

“It gives geoscientists a good understanding of what’s actually happening. It allows you to interpret different things you see in the media and tell what they really mean.”

For the duo, they say they hope their time and efforts inspire children to study geosciences. But they try to keep it fun.

Signage guides the way to Northside Farmers' Market. Credit/Hannah White

Signage guides the way to Northside Farmers Market. Credit/Hannah White

The challenge, Corcoran says, is “finding the balance between an interactive activity that kids are excited about, while also exposing them to the science. If they remember how awesome geology can be from the activity, that is a win for us.

“There’s science everywhere, anyone can be a scientist.”

The next opportunity for families to enjoy Science Harvest at the Northside Farmers Market will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15, at 4222 Hamilton Ave.

Featured image at top: Children conduct experiments at the Science Harvest tent. Credit/Hannah White

Headshot of By Serigne Thiam

By Serigne Thiam

Student Journalist, A&S Marketing and Communication

Related Stories

4642 Results
1

UC grad students bring geosciences to Northside Farmers Market

November 8, 2023

Families bring their children to Cincinnati’s Northside Farmers Market every Wednesday, rain or shine, for the vibrant social hub and healthy, and affordable foods. This year, a group of UC grad students has added a new feature to the 20-year-old market tradition— Science Harvest, an outreach initiative designed to share science with local communities through conversation and hands-on learning activities.

2

UC offers new environmental studies degree

February 9, 2022

The University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts & Sciences has announced a new environmental studies bachelor of arts program to complement its current bachelor of science degree. The new interdisciplinary program will take a less scientific approach to the discipline, focusing on environmental history, philosophy, literature and writing, society and culture, and the implementation of environmental policies.    The new degree is designed to to fill the areas of knowledge that environmental studies students have wanted in the curriculum, such as writing-heavy courses and a more humanities-based approach, says David Stradling, professor of history and chair of the committee for the environmental studies BA program.

3

UC launches school dedicated to environmental studies, solutions

August 14, 2023

The University of Cincinnati has launched its new School of Environmental Studies and Sustainability (SEaS) within the College of Arts & Sciences. “The faculty who worked to create a new unit for environmental studies were driven by the desire to improve curriculum, including adding new degrees, as well as increasing research opportunities,” says professor David Stradling, interim director of SEaS.

4

Feather chemistry helps track origin of birds

October 11, 2021

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati are using geology and rainfall patterns to track migratory birds of prey across North America. Using an innovative combination of isotopes from the feathers of kestrels, goshawks and other predatory birds called raptors, researchers can narrow down where the young birds likely hatched and learned to fly. This method offers a useful tool to help scientists track elusive, wide-ranging animals, identify critical habitats and observe any changes in migration patterns.

6

Regional media: UC expert talks about abandoned wells

September 15, 2022

UC College of Arts and Sciences associate professor Amy Townsend-Small talks to the WFMP program Sustainability Now! and WOSU's the Ohio Statehouse about Kentucky's leaking oil and gas wells and a new federal initiative to cap them.

8

What is environmental studies?

February 18, 2022

What do you think of when you hear the word “environment?” Maybe you think of nature, your neighborhood, or the entire planet. If you thought “all the above,” you would be correct. Because the environment encompasses a broad range of contexts, environmental problems are complex and ever-changing. University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences offers an environmental studies program that embraces creative and sustainable approaches to real-world issues of climate change, environmental justice, essential resource depletion, population growth, public health, and hunger. Rooted in academic traditions of natural and social sciences, environmental science incorporates experiential and service learning, collaborative problem solving, and meaningful interactions with environmental professionals. Students are granted strong foundational knowledge in key areas and can “speak the language” of multiple disciplines involved with environmental problem solving. Having such a breadth of knowledge allows graduates to succeed in a competitive job market.

9

UC student balances online classes, internships outdoors

December 17, 2021

Sydney Mentrup, a senior University of Cincinnati environmental studies student, finished up her sixth internship with the National Park Service last September. The program, which lasted over the summer months, brought her to Glacier National Park in Montana, about 2,000 miles from her hometown of Cincinnati. The palatial mountains, wildlife and crystal blue skies set the scene as she worked on site in Glacier and on completing her last classes in UC’s College of Arts & Sciences. Across the country, there are 423 national park sites, spanning nearly all 50 states, and American territories such as Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Guam. Mentrup has visited almost 250 of these parks and sites. As a student at Reading High School, Mentrup became involved with philanthropy work and community outreach, and volunteered at Newport Aquarium.