From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Jan 3 17:10:33 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Guillaume Mauger via pccgrads) Date: Fri Jan 3 17:10:49 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: Job Opportunity: Grand Teton Wildlife Connectivity Modeling Postdoctoral Research Associate In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- De : PNWCESU Date: ven. 3 janv. 2025 ? 14:51 Subject: Job Opportunity: Grand Teton Wildlife Connectivity Modeling Postdoctoral Research Associate To: PNWCESU Dear PNW CESU partners, The University of Montana invites applications for a *Grand Teton Wildlife Connectivity Modeling* *Postdoctoral Research Associate.* This two-year postdoctoral project will be conducted through the Montana Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit (U.S. Geological Survey) at the University of Montana (UM) in close collaboration with the National Park Service (NPS), including project partners at Grand Teton National Park (GRTE), the NPS Biological Resources Division, and the NPS Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network. The importance of large, connected landscapes to achieving sustained ecological health is increasingly apparent. Habitat loss and fragmentation are often primary threats to species facing declines and extirpations nationally and globally. The effects of habitat loss and fragmentation are exacerbated by other threats such as climate change, invasive species, disease, and over harvest. As such, the NPS requires tools and approaches to ensure protection of biodiverse areas and to facilitate daily, seasonal, and life cycle movements of wildlife species both within and beyond park boundaries. This project will develop tools and approaches to inform local level management (e.g., visitor use planning, transportation planning, construction activities, etc.) while also linking to broader conservation actions across the larger landscape. Grand Teton National Park will serve as our pilot NPS unit. The project will seek to produce foundational spatial products for GRTE along with a template for how this general approach can be implemented across NPS units. Specifically, the project will: 1) review methods and approaches for developing resource maps for GRTE, with a focus on areas of high biodiversity and ecological importance for connectivity; 2) delineate and compile appropriate data; 3) develop spatial models and assess model fit; and 4) develop workflows and documentation that support like product development for additional NPS units. Project products will be used to inform park planning and identify areas for cross-jurisdictional wildlife management and habitat conservation. Position is full-time, 1.0 FTE, Letter of Appointment (target start date between February and June 2025) and includes a comprehensive and competitive benefits package including insurance package, mandatory retirement plan, partial tuition waiver, and wellness program. Salary for this position is $75,000 per year commensurate with qualifications. The link to the application is here: Apply ? Interfolio The park?s point of contact for this position is Yvette Converse ( Yvette_converse@nps.gov), Chief of Science and Resource Management at Grand Teton. Best of luck! Kylie Kylie Baker (she/her) PNW CESU Science Communication Specialist *Pacific Northwest Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit * pnwcesu@uw.edu -- Guillaume Mauger Pronouns: he/him/his Office of the Washington State Climatologist | Climate Impacts Group 206.685.0317 | gmauger@uw.edu EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 6 15:06:50 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 6 15:06:55 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Imagining a post-carbon future: discussions with climate leaders--Thursdays at 2:30 by application Message-ID: There is still space in the seminar if you have space in your schedule.. Imagining a post-carbon future: discussions with climate leaders 1 credit graduate seminar Thursday 2:30-4:50pm in FISH 213 Led by Brady Walkinshaw, College of the Environment Affiliate Professor, and CEO of Earth Alliance. Access granted by instructor from an application link This is a graduate level survey course that brings senior leaders, policymakers, activists, investors, and thinkers across disciplines in the environmental and climate field into conversations with graduate students. The course focuses on a solutions-based lens and explores perspectives and pathways on how to rapidly decarbonize our global economy to reach targets for GHG reductions and biodiversity loss. The course also aims to provide opportunities for students to expand their networks and engage formally and informally with leading thinkers and involves optional evening events through the quarter to dig deeper into the topics and themes covered in the course. Speakers will include political figures and policymakers, academics from other institutions, investors at leading funds, corporate sustainability leaders from Fortune 100 companies, and more. The course will also bring a media, storytelling, and cultural lens to our discussions and will be grounded in an audience framework developed by Harmony Labs and their work on a Narrative Observatory. The course is application-only, and we will cap the course size at 25. Students will be assigned weekly readings and will be responsible for completing short 2-3 paragraph reflections on the readings prior to each seminar. Brady Walkinshaw is founding CEO of a new global climate initiative, Earth Alliance, co-founded by philanthropist Laurene Powell Jobs and actor Leonardo DiCaprio to accelerate progress on solving the climate crisis. Before taking the helm at Earth Alliance, Brady was CEO at Grist, the nation's leading environment media nonprofit. He has also served as a Washington State senator (43rd District) where he chaired the Latino Caucus. Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 6 15:16:01 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 6 15:19:31 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Pacific Northwest Climate Ambassadors: Applications due Feb 1 Message-ID: Pacific Northwest Climate Ambassadors: Call for Applications The PNW Climate Ambassadors program at the University of Washington seeks to train graduate students studying climate change, its impacts, or potential responses to effectively engage with various sectors of the public. The program will train a cohort of about 10 graduate students to develop presentations on a climate-related topic of interest to a unique sector of the public that is also related to the students? own area of expertise. The program begins with a 2 hour introductory training in winter quarter 2025. After the training, each student will develop a presentation on a topic related to their area of expertise in consultation with the Program on Climate Change (PCC) and the Washington State Climate Office (WASCO) to be delivered in a public setting based on the many requests to PCC and WASCO from the public for talks to engage with various communities. Students will practice their talks in front of a subset of their PNW Climate Ambassadors cohort and a representative from PCC and/or WASCO. Students will be expected to refine their talks after this feedback session before delivering their public presentation. We expect students to complete the program by the end of spring quarter. PNW Climate Ambassadors will be featured on a website hosted by the PCC. Students will earn a $100 honorarium for each public speaking engagement completed. Students who have completed the program may remain PNW Climate Ambassadors for the duration of their degree. The PNW Climate Ambassadors program is a collaboration between the Program on Climate Change (PCC), the Washington State Climate Office (WASCO) and the College of the Environment Communications Team. To apply, please submit a single pdf that includes both your two-page CV/resume and a one-paragraph statement of why you want to participate in this program and what you hope to learn. Submit this application, with the subject line ?PNW Ambassador Application? to uwpcc@uw.edu by Feb. 1, 2025. Questions? Contact Miriam Bertram at uwpcc@pcc.edu. Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: PNWClimateAmbassadorsApplication.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 52270 bytes Desc: PNWClimateAmbassadorsApplication.pdf URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 6 13:24:18 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Darcy Gould via pccgrads) Date: Tue Jan 7 08:26:59 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] NW CASC Seeks Postdoc Focused on Coastal Squeeze Message-ID: Greetings, The University of Washington, in partnership with the Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (NW CASC), is searching for a talented scientist with an interest in coastal squeeze ? when human and natural barriers challenge the inland range shifts of coastal species and ecosystems in response to sea-level rise. The postdoctoral fellow will join a national cohort as part of the Climate Adaptation Postdoctoral (CAP) Fellowship Program, hosted by the U.S. Geological Survey Climate Adaptation Science Centers. The fellow will conduct research related to coastal squeeze in the Northwest and will also join eight postdocs from around the country to conduct a national synthesis project related to species range shifts. The successful candidate for this position will have strong spatial and quantitative modeling skills and a broad understanding of coastal ecology and/or coastal geomorphology and climate change. This full-time, two-year position will be based at the University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences and will work closely with partners at the NW CASC and Oregon State University as well as coastal managers from Washington and Oregon. Applications received by February 1, 2025 will be prioritized. Learn more and apply! Please help us share this opportunity by distributing it to your networks! [signature_2588808635] [signature_1405614138] Darcy Gould Pronouns: she/her/hers Communications Manager | NW Climate Adaptation Science Center darcyjw@uw.edu | @NW_CASC EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 28743 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 23771 bytes Desc: image002.png URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 9 11:04:28 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (David Strand via pccgrads) Date: Fri Jan 10 09:09:17 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Please Share: Climate Data Rescue Events Jan 15 and 22 Message-ID: Hello, I'm writing to share that the UW Information School?s Center for Advances in Libraries, Museums, and Archives (CALMA) is hosting two Seattle campus-based climate-focused ?Data Rescues? events this month?on January 15 and 22. These events are hybrid and open to everyone. We would greatly appreciate if you could share the information below with the students and faculty in your department and any other networks you think may be interested. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns. Many thanks for helping spread the word! Climate Data Rescue Events - January 15 and 22 at the Suzzallo Library Open Scholarship Commons Are you worried about the changes proposed by the incoming White House administration? Wondering how you can help bolster government accountability and transparency? How about joining a constellation of ?Data Rescue? efforts being organized across the US to preserve publicly available data about critical areas such as climate, education, or healthcare? With your help, our local community can contribute to preserving at-risk data to ensure access for future information seekers and researchers. The University of Washington Information School?s Center for Advances in Libraries, Museums, and Archives (CALMA) is hosting two Seattle campus-based emergency ?Data Rescues? events this month. These events are open to everyone, no matter your skill level or areas of interest. Lunch and snacks will be provided; please register for either or both events using this link: https://forms.gle/wyp78YtKzrotUKHK7 What is a Data Rescue: Modeled after the 2016-2017 ?Data Rescues, guerilla archiving actions,? these events are volunteer run hackathons meaning collaborative drop-in events where people work together on a variety of digital archiving tasks over a short period of time (1-3 hrs). More information When/Where are the events: * University of Washington Suzzallo Library Open Scholarship Commons (first floor) * Zoom link available for offsite attendees (sessions will not be recorded) * Wednesday, January 15 from 12:30 to 5:30 pm * Wednesday, January 22 from 12:30 to 5:30 pm Registration: Submit your info beforehand to ensure we can accommodate dietary needs --- David Strand (he/him) University of Washington MLIS '25 Research Assistant | LIS Forward & CALMA (Center for Advances in Libraries, Museums, and Archives) dstrand3@uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Jan 15 12:02:49 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Guillaume Mauger via pccgrads) Date: Wed Jan 15 12:03:10 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [EarthLabUpdates] Applications Now Open for Climate Equity Graduate Student Summer Program In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- De : EarthLab via EarthlabUpdates Date: mer. 15 janv. 2025 ? 11:30 Subject: [EarthLabUpdates] Applications Now Open for Climate Equity Graduate Student Summer Program To: climateupdate@u.washington.edu , earthlabupdates@u.washington.edu The Climate Impacts Group is excited to announce that we are now accepting applications for our three-week summer graduate program. Please help spread the word to eligible students (master?s, doctoral, and post-doc) and practitioners (within five years of a terminal graduate degree) who might be interested in this opportunity. Internship information and links below. The priority deadline to apply is February 28 and the final deadline is March 17 @ 5PM PT. Thank you! EarthLab Are you a graduate student (master?s, doctoral, post-doc) or recent graduate (five years from a terminal degree) interested in understanding how climate justice connects to your research, work, or life? The *Climate Equity and Resilience Summer Institute (CERSI)* invites you to a transformative *three-week summer program* designed to deepen your knowledge and grow your community. >From * June 16?July 4, 2025*, participants will get to explore climate justice through immersive field trips and hands-on workshops, all while building meaningful connections with others passionate about environmental justice in a variety of contexts. *What you?ll gain:* - A deeper understanding of what social, climate, and environmental justice means across different scales and contexts. - Concrete tools and practices to address and deconstruct power dynamics that influence relationships between academia and communities. - A supportive network of scholars and practitioners committed to solidarity, equity, and justice in their work. *What to expect:* - Field trips that bring theory to life in real-world settings. - Lectures and workshops led by a diverse group of experts and practitioners. - A collaborative, justice-oriented learning environment on UW Seattle?s campus and at Pack Forest (near Mount Rainier). CERSI is hosted by the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative at the UW Climate Impacts Group and is supported by EarthLab . Scholarships, stipends, and housing support are available to make this opportunity accessible for eligible participants. *Learn more and apply by the March 17th deadline at * *https://bit.ly/CERSI25* *. * To view the flyer, please follow this link and download the PDF. _______________________________________________ EarthlabUpdates mailing list EarthlabUpdates@u.washington.edu http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/earthlabupdates -- Guillaume Mauger Pronouns: he/him/his Position | Washington State Climate Office 206.685.0317 | gmauger@uw.edu | @WAstateclimate EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 120156 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 1285276 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 16 17:20:49 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Guillaume Mauger via pccgrads) Date: Thu Jan 16 17:21:05 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [CIGInternal] [CIGaffiliates] Now Accepting Proposals: 2025-26 NW CASC Research Fellowship Program In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- De : Darcy Gould via CIGaffiliates via CIGInternal < ciginternal@u.washington.edu> Date: jeu. 16 janv. 2025 ? 15:20 Subject: [CIGInternal] [CIGaffiliates] Now Accepting Proposals: 2025-26 NW CASC Research Fellowship Program To: Greetings! The Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center is currently accepting proposals for its 2025-2026 Research Fellowship Program . Please help us share this opportunity by forwarding this announcement to your network. Feel free to also share this Bluesky post and/or this LinkedIn post ! *If you?d like to stay connected to the NW CASC, consider signing up for the NW CASC Connections newsletter **here* *!* View this email in your browser *Delivering science to help fish, wildlife, water, land and people adapt to a changing climate* We are now accepting proposals for our 2025-26 Research Fellowship Program! The Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (NW CASC) is now accepting proposals for our 2025-2026 Research Fellowship Program, which supports research related to climate adaptation for Northwest natural and cultural resource management and provides training in developing decision-relevant science. The NW CASC invites proposals from graduate students at Boise State University (BSU), Oregon State University (OSU), Portland State University (PSU), University of Montana (UM), University of Washington (UW), Washington State University (WSU) and Western Washington University (WWU) and postdoctoral scholars at BSU, OSU, PSU, UM, WSU and WWU (this fellowship cannot provide funding for postdocs at UW).* The deadline to submit proposals is March 10, 2025.* *Learn More & Apply* RFP Info Session | Feb. 11 @ 11 a.m. PT We are hosting a virtual information session on Tuesday, February 11 at 11:00 a.m. PT. We?ll present an overview of the program and RFP and provide time to ask questions about the program and application process. *Register * [image: Website] [image: LinkedIn] *Copyright ? 2019 Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center, All rights reserved.* *Our mailing address is:* Box 355674 Seattle, WA 98195-5674 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list . ??? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ????? ??? ??? ??? _______________________________________________ CIGaffiliates mailing list CIGaffiliates@u.washington.edu http://mailman12.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cigaffiliates _______________________________________________ CIGInternal mailing list CIGInternal@u.washington.edu http://mailman12.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/ciginternal -- Guillaume Mauger Pronouns: he/him/his Director | Washington State Climate Office 206.685.0317 | gmauger@uw.edu | @WAstateclimate EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 16 13:44:53 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Darcy Gould via pccgrads) Date: Fri Jan 17 09:23:13 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Now Accepting Proposals: 2025-26 NW CASC Research Fellowship Program In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Greetings! The Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center is currently accepting proposals for its 2025-2026 Research Fellowship Program. Please help us share this opportunity by forwarding this announcement to your network. Feel free to also share this Bluesky post and/or this LinkedIn post! If you?d like to stay connected to the NW CASC, consider signing up for the NW CASC Connections newsletter here! View this email in your browser [https://gallery.mailchimp.com/a8247674b250184d30cfb4295/images/51427ea7-b0b4-466e-afbe-d1c780f875d9.png] Delivering science to help fish, wildlife, water, land and people adapt to a changing climate [https://mcusercontent.com/a8247674b250184d30cfb4295/images/5bfefc74-58c8-4cb5-f989-19f5a01c9a2f.jpg] We are now accepting proposals for our 2025-26 Research Fellowship Program! The Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (NW CASC) is now accepting proposals for our 2025-2026 Research Fellowship Program, which supports research related to climate adaptation for Northwest natural and cultural resource management and provides training in developing decision-relevant science. The NW CASC invites proposals from graduate students at Boise State University (BSU), Oregon State University (OSU), Portland State University (PSU), University of Montana (UM), University of Washington (UW), Washington State University (WSU) and Western Washington University (WWU) and postdoctoral scholars at BSU, OSU, PSU, UM, WSU and WWU (this fellowship cannot provide funding for postdocs at UW). The deadline to submit proposals is March 10, 2025. Learn More & Apply RFP Info Session | Feb. 11 @ 11 a.m. PT We are hosting a virtual information session on Tuesday, February 11 at 11:00 a.m. PT. We?ll present an overview of the program and RFP and provide time to ask questions about the program and application process. Register [https://mcusercontent.com/a8247674b250184d30cfb4295/images/6767ce3b-2803-ab3a-9fc5-59517566c848.jpg] [Website] [LinkedIn] Copyright ? 2019 Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center, All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: Box 355674 Seattle, WA 98195-5674 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferencesor unsubscribe from this list. ??? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ?????? ??? ??? ??? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Jan 17 12:09:05 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Lauren B Brohawn via pccgrads) Date: Sat Jan 18 09:54:59 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Environmental Innovation Challenge: Upcoming Events + Info Sessions | Deadline Feb 10 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: So, you're interested in environmental + climate innovation and action? Feeling inspired and motivated to start (or be part of starting) something? Consider forming a team for this year's Environmental Innovation Challenge! The annual Environmental Innovation Challenge is an exciting extracurricular experience that gives students the opportunity to come up with meaningful solutions to big problems the world faces related to climate and the environment. The competition is open to both undergrad and graduate students at accredited colleges and universities across Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Alaska, and British Columbia. Not a current student in the region? Share this opportunity with someone who is! Application: https://platform.younoodle.com/competition/2025_environmental_innovation_challenge Deadline: February 10, 12 noon PT Here are the events coming up next week+ to support your interest in applying to the Environmental Innovation Challenge or other Buerk Center competitions: * Form a Team, Find a Team: Attend Team Building and Networking Night, Tuesday, January 21 at 7 pm - 8:30 pm * Find inspiration for an EIC idea: Attend the Climate + Sustainability Idea Jam, Wednesday, January 22 at 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM * Info Session: Virtual | Friday, January 24, 12 - 12:45 pm * Info Session: In-Person | Tuesday, February 4, 11 am - 12:00 pm (stay for Team Tuesday directly after!) And here are a few takeaways that I captured from the panelists at an event earlier this week who all started something in the climate + environmental space: * Be curious, find a gap, and just start! * Pilot, iterate, pilot, iterate * Spaces they'd like to see disrupted or where solutions are needed: * Data Centers + AI and the energy and resources they do/will require * Furniture designed for repair and dismantling * Food and climate resilience * Secondhand Indian and "non-white" wedding attire * American standards for food and food regulations Happy to set up a time to connect if you have questions or want to talk through ideas! Best, Lauren Lauren Brohawn (she/her) Associate Director, Environmental Innovation Challenge [cid:image001.png@01DB682F.EBF25340] Founders Hall, 4th Floor, Rm. 406 Box 353200, Seattle WA 98195 206.685.3813 brohal@uw.edu | eic.uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: Climate + Sustainability Idea Jam v1.2 1.png Type: image/png Size: 2006165 bytes Desc: Climate + Sustainability Idea Jam v1.2 1.png URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Tue Jan 21 10:58:28 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Tue Jan 21 10:59:20 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: TODAY: NOAA/Partners West Watch Webinar: January 21 from 2-3pm PT In-Reply-To: <633fbb64-c491-43f7-ba74-bac4b0788e1d@NOAA.GOV> References: <633fbb64-c491-43f7-ba74-bac4b0788e1d@NOAA.GOV> Message-ID: Highlighting relevant info, link to register is below in original message. West Watch is a monthly webinar series that brings together NOAA staff and partners from across the agency and region to share information about climate observations and impacts across the West. It?s a great forum to learn more about recent events and conditions, and to hear from individuals and organizations that provide climate services to the region. UW is a partner, so access should be granted. Registration button below. This month will feature the ?original? format, with discussion of the atmospheric, hydrologic, and marine conditions we?ve experienced in the last several months. We?ll also cover the available outlooks for what?s coming. Our presenters will be: *Dan McEvoy*, Western Regional Climate Center Reno, NV *Jan Newton*, Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems (NANOOS) Seattle, WA *Alex Harper*, Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System (CeNCOOS) Moss Landing, CA *Clarissa Anderson*, Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System (SCCOOS) La Jolla, CA -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: TODAY: NOAA/Partners West Watch Webinar: January 21 from 2-3pm PT Date: Tue, 21 Jan 2025 10:16:36 -0800 Hi everyone, This is a friendly reminder that NOAA West's "West Watch" is occurring today from 2-3pm PT. You can *Register Here* . Thank you! Nicole On Thu, Jan 16, 2025 at 10:05?AM Trusted Regional Sender - NOAA Service Account wrote: > Hello All, > > This is a friendly reminder to consider registering and attending the > next edition of *West Watch, on Tuesday, January 21 at 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. > PT.* > > *Register here* > > > > > West Watch is a monthly webinar series that brings together NOAA staff and > partners from across the agency and region to share information about > climate observations and impacts across the West. It?s a great forum to > learn more about recent events and conditions, and to hear from individuals > and organizations that provide climate services to the region. > > > > This month will feature the ?original? format, with discussion of the > atmospheric, hydrologic, and marine conditions we?ve experienced in the > last several months. We?ll also cover the available outlooks for what?s > coming. Our presenters will be: > > > > *Dan McEvoy*, Western Regional Climate Center > Reno, NV > > > > *Jan Newton*, Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems > (NANOOS) > Seattle, WA > > > > *Alex Harper*, Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System > (CeNCOOS) > > Moss Landing, CA > > > > *Clarissa Anderson*, Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System > (SCCOOS) > La Jolla, CA > > > > Missed a West Watch? *Check out our* *recordings from past webinars*. You > can find the videos on our new > West > Watch webpage > > . > > > > Please contact Dan McEvoy (info below) or Nicole.Fernandes@noaa.gov for > questions. > > > Thank you, > > Nicole Fernandes > > ---------- Forwarded message --------- > From: Trusted Regional Sender - NOAA Service Account < > trusted.regional.sender@noaa.gov> > Date: Mon, Jan 6, 2025 at 8:00?AM > Subject: NOAA/Partners West Watch Webinar: January 21 from 2-3pm PT > To: _NWS WR NOAA West , _NOAA Regional Western Region < > noaa.regional.western.region@noaa.gov> > Cc: > > > [image: Image] > > > > Greetings, > > > > The NOAA West Regional Collaboration Network encourages you to attend the > next edition of *West Watch, on Tuesday, January 21 at 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. > PT.* > > *Register here* > > > > > West Watch is a monthly webinar series that brings together NOAA staff and > partners from across the agency and region to share information about > climate observations and impacts across the West. It?s a great forum to > learn more about recent events and conditions, and to hear from individuals > and organizations that provide climate services to the region. > > > > This month will feature the ?original? format, with discussion of the > atmospheric, hydrologic, and marine conditions we?ve experienced in the > last several months. We?ll also cover the available outlooks for what?s > coming. Our presenters will be: > > > > *Dan McEvoy*, Western Regional Climate Center > Reno, NV > > > > *Jan Newton*, Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems > (NANOOS) > Seattle, WA > > > > *Alex Harper*, Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System > (CeNCOOS) > > Moss Landing, CA > > > > *Clarissa Anderson*, Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System > (SCCOOS) > La Jolla, CA > > > > Missed a West Watch? *Check out our* *recordings from past webinars*. You > can find the videos on our new > West > Watch webpage > > . > > > > Please contact Dan McEvoy (info below) or Nicole.Fernandes@noaa.gov for > questions. > > > Thank you, > > Nicole Fernandes > > ------------------------------- > > Dan McEvoy, PhD > > Associate Research Professor > > Regional Climatologist > > Desert Research Institute > > Western Regional Climate Center > > Office: 775-673-7682 > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Jan 22 09:26:49 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Wed Jan 22 09:30:09 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: Climate/Energy Fellowship with OpenMinds In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Kimberly Poppy Sinclair Date: Sun, Jan 19, 2025 at 9:06?PM Subject: Inquiry About Recruiting for Climate/Energy Fellowship To: Dear Miriam, I am emailing you to ask if you could send out a notification of a climate/energy fellowship to the PCC channels? I am currently a PhD student at UW in Earth and Space Sciences as well as Astrobiology and I am also a NextGen Leader with OpenMinds. It has been an amazing opportunity for me as a student interested in going into climate tech and wanting to network for career opportunities. I couldn't recommend this program highly enough, and would love for other students from UW to have this opportunity. I have attached the brochure for the application, and the fellowship description below. I would be happy to explain more about the NextGen Leader program as well. Just let me know! Thanks, Kimberly Sinclair About the Company/Team OpenMinds drives impact projects to meet the world?s energy needs while reducing emissions rapidly. We are accelerating progress against the Dual Challenge by 203X. OpenMinds brings together a network of 100 leaders across diverse industries, nonprofits, academia, and philanthropy. Our work as a 501(c)(3) is data-driven, non-partisan, and action-oriented, powered by a 360? systems-engineering approach and a unique solutions framework. About the Role We are looking for students pursuing Masters and Doctoral degrees (e.g. MBA, MA, MS, PhD, JD, MPP etc.) who are leaders in their fields and passionate about making an impact in the energy and climate space. While the focus is on graduate students, we are also open to considering 1-2 exceptional undergraduates. We?re aiming for a diverse pool of candidates, including international students. We are expecting that NextGen Leaders will still be matriculating as students during the duration of the program (i.e. from April 2025 - March 2026). The program requires 2-5 hours/week and a commitment to attend a bootcamp in a US based city for 3.5 days in June 2025. Program highlights: - Mentorship from professionals across sectors, tailored to participant interest - Hands-on sponsored projects with top companies focused on the Dual Challenge - Workshops and networking with global leaders and peers in the energy sector - A fully sponsored bootcamp in Houston, offering immersive learning and collaboration Applications are due January 31st, 2025, and require basic information, short essay responses, and an option letter of recommendation from a faculty member. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: OpenMindsNextGen2025StudentFlyer.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 72244 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 23 11:08:46 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Thu Jan 23 11:09:06 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] You're Invited to the 2025 PCC Winter Welcome - RSVP Now! Message-ID: Celebrate Climate Science Collaboration! at the 11th annual UW Program on Climate Change Winter Welcome You are invited to join us at the PCC Winter Welcome on Wednesday, February 26th from 5-8 pm. The evening will begin at 5 pm in FSH 102, the auditorium of the Fisheries Sciences Building. PCC Director Becky Alexander will welcome everyone and introduce new community members, share program updates, and host lightning talks by new postdocs. The event will then transition into the Fisheries Lobby to socialize with friends and colleagues and enjoy a catered appetizer buffet with drinks. There will be an opportunity to vote for the theme of the 2025 PCC Summer Institute which will be held September 10-12 at Friday Harbor Laboratories. This year's theme contenders are: * Paleoclimate constraints on future climate * Climate extremes and attribution science * PNW climate change and impacts Please RSVP on or before Wednesday, February 19th, 2025. This helps us provide an accurate headcount to the caterer. Hope to see you there! Questions? Contact Miriam at uwpcc@uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Jan 24 08:51:54 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Fri Jan 24 08:52:26 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] =?utf-8?q?Fwd=3A_=5BEnvironment=5Fadvisers=5D_FW=3A_Fu?= =?utf-8?q?nding_Opportunity=3A_Glacier_National_Park_Conservancy_?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=93_Jerry_O=E2=80=99Neal_Student_Research_Fellowsh?= =?utf-8?q?ip?= In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Fellowship opportunity in Glacier National Park! Could double as a GCeCS capstone project--see blog from Taryn Black (alum ESS). -Miriam *From:* PNWCESU *Sent:* Thursday, January 23, 2025 12:30 PM *To:* PNWCESU *Subject:* Funding Opportunity: Glacier National Park Conservancy ? Jerry O?Neal Student Research Fellowship Good afternoon PNW CESU partners, Applications are now being accepted for the *Glacier National Park Conservancy ? Jerry O'Neal Research Fellowship* for work in Glacier National Park. The fellowship aims to provide educational assistance for students seeking to understand natural and cultural resource issues and how these interact with human values. Special consideration will be given to proposals that address the following: 1. natural resource issues such as aquatic ecology, terrestrial ecology, fire ecology, invasive plants, and climate change 2. cultural resource issues, such as history and architectural studies, cultural landscape reports, ethnographic research, and archeology 3. social science that informs resource management about a natural or cultural topic and/or that addresses visitor impacts to park resources Competition is open to graduate students or superior upper division undergraduate students at universities and colleges in the *CESU Network *. Applicants may request up to $7500. Applications must be submitted electronically by March 19, 2025. See details in the *Application Directions * (also attached). Good luck! Kylie Kylie Baker (she/her) PNW CESU Science Communication Specialist *Pacific Northwest Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit * pnwcesu@uw.edu _______________________________________________ Environment_advisers mailing list Environment_advisers@u.washington.edu http://mailman12.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/environment_advisers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 2025 GNPC_O'Neal_announcement.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 401868 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 27 10:26:56 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 27 10:27:06 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Thursday presentation on Accelerating Climate and Energy Progress Message-ID: Maya Tolstoy (Dean of the College of the Environment) & Frank Hodge (Dean of the Foster School of Business) invite you to an exclusive presentation with David Baldwin, founder of OpenMinds and Dean Tolstoy to discuss, ?Accelerating Climate and Energy Progress?, and to explain what OpenMinds is doing to address the dual challenge of meeting increasing energy demand, while also addressing the urgent need to decarbonize. This is an incredible opportunity to engage directly with a leading voice in energy transition and climate action. A question and answer session will follow. Please RSVP here. Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 27 10:40:54 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 27 10:41:29 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: ASPIRE discussion series starts 2/18 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Program on Climate Change Colleagues, I?d like to make you aware of a new NSF-funded project, *Active Societal Participation in Research and Education* (ASPIRE ), which seeks to advance equitable, community-based approaches to geoscience (including earth, ocean, atmosphere, marine, polar) practiced within academic settings. Corey and I are both PIs, as are colleagues from UMCES (Lora Harris), ASU (Raj Pandya), WWU (Marco Hatch, Natalie Baloy), and Daniel Aguirre (Pueblo). There are many activities within ASPIRE, the first of which is our Equitable Exchange Virtual Discussion Series. Facilitated by Lora and Raj, this interactive webinar series (7 sessions, we encourage you to attend all!) is for anyone curious about community engagement, through to those looking for a space to discuss their deep experience navigating co-produced research. Here are the dates, and the links will take you directly to the RSVP allowing you into the session: Feb 18: Fostering Equitable Exchange to Broaden Participation in the Geosciences Mar 4: Critical Awareness of Scientific History Mar 18 Centering Community Apr 1: Navigating Multiple, Politicized Relationships Apr 15: Building Relationships: Ownership & Reciprocity May 6: Building Relationships: Facilitation & Care May 20: Reflection & Sharing Each session is 1.5 hours, 1200-1330PST. A flyer (with all of these links) is attached. Please feel free to contact us at connect@equitableexchange.org . Hope you will join us! j Julia K Parrish Lowell A. and Frankie L. Wakefield Professor of Ocean Fishery Sciences Associate Dean, Academic Affairs, College of the Environment, University of Washington 206-276-8665 cell -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ASPIRE Virtual Discussion Series.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1280636 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 27 10:43:14 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 27 10:43:21 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fw: Graduate student needed: Community engagement opportunity with NCRC In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ________________________________ From: Nicolette C Worrell Sent: Monday, January 27, 2025 9:25 AM Subject: Graduate student needed: Community engagement opportunity with NCRC The Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative is seeking a graduate student to support an 8-week community engagement opportunity. See below for details and please help spread the word to your students and networks. The deadline is January 31, this Friday. Thank you! The Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative (NCRC) seeks a graduate student (Ph.D. and Master?s) to support their 7-week community engagement project with the community-based organization, CAF? Wenatchee (CAF?). The selected individual will receive a stipend for their learning and training opportunity (see below). Learning & Training * Gain experience in teaching content related to climate change and environmental justice. * Gain hands-on experience engaging with a community-based nonprofit and community members. * Learn how to take large, theoretical concepts and make them relatable to a general audience. * Learn about how climate change impacts rural communities in eastern Washington. The grad student will facilitate online learning sessions and adult education programming on the topics of climate change, wildfires, air pollution, and environmental justice. With the use of personal air quality (AQ) sensors, course participants will engage in AQ monitoring. Time commitment is approximately 40-hours over 8 weeks and includes the following: * Online teaching and facilitation: 45-50 minutes per week for 7-weeks. * Preparation for each class: approximately 2 hours per week. * Collection and organization of survey materials: approximately 4-hours. The prospective graduate student will: * Have general knowledge about climate change and its impacts on eastern Washington. * Have knowledge of environmental justice (EJ) theory and understanding of EJ considerations for rural communities. * Be bilingual in Spanish and English * Have knowledge of eastern Washington and climate impacts on rural communities. About the NCRC The NCRC assists Tribes and frontline communities in improving their resilience to climate change. CAF? is a non-profit organization that advances family and community growth through education and serves a culturally diverse community in eastern Washington primarily in the Wenatchee and Yakima areas. About course participants The CAF? Steering Committee cohort will be centered around educating community participants about climate change, wildfires and smoke, indoor and outdoor air pollution, and environmental justice. The cohort is made up of community members from both Wenatchee county and Yakima county and varies in ages from high school students to older adults. Participants in this cohort come from various educational backgrounds so the prospective graduate student should be comfortable with discussing climate change, environmental justice, or air pollution with those who have entry-level background knowledge of those topics. Stipend The selected graduate student will receive a stipend of $500 every 2-weeks, based on UW?s payroll calendar, totaling $2,000 for the 8-weeks. Stipend payments are a non-compensatory payment to defray living expenses during the period of this UW program. To apply Graduate students must be currently registered as a student at the UW. Send a letter of interest of no more than 300 words with your resume (including any relevant courses) to Nicolette Worrell (nicow88@uw.edu). Please send your application as a PDF. In your letter of interest, please tell us: (1) why you?re interested, (2) about any relevant work experience, (3) background knowledge or lived experiences that may contribute to you successfully leading this work. We will review applications on a rolling timeline. We will begin reviewing applications on January 31st and continue accepting applications until the position is filled. -- [A blue and white logo with a mountain and a waterfall Description automatically generated] Nicolette Worrell, M.M.A. Pronouns: she/her/hers Research Scientist | Climate Impacts Group 407.435.3151 | nicow88@uw.edu | @CIG_UW EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001[93].jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 73777 bytes Desc: image001[93].jpg URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Jan 27 13:16:05 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Mon Jan 27 13:19:35 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] PNW Climate Ambassador--Applications due Feb 1 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: REMINDER!!! APPLICATIONS DUE BY THIS SATURDAY, FEB. 1 Pacific Northwest Climate Ambassadors: Call for Applications The PNW Climate Ambassadors program at the University of Washington seeks to train graduate students studying climate change, its impacts, or potential responses to effectively engage with various sectors of the public. The program will train a cohort of about 10 graduate students to develop presentations on a climate-related topic of interest to a unique sector of the public that is also related to the students? own area of expertise. The program begins with a 2 hour introductory training in winter quarter 2025. After the training, each student will develop a presentation on a topic related to their area of expertise in consultation with the Program on Climate Change (PCC) and the Washington State Climate Office (WASCO) to be delivered in a public setting based on the many requests to PCC and WASCO from the public for talks to engage with various communities. Students will practice their talks in front of a subset of their PNW Climate Ambassadors cohort and a representative from PCC and/or WASCO. Students will be expected to refine their talks after this feedback session before delivering their public presentation. We expect students to complete the program by the end of spring quarter. PNW Climate Ambassadors will be featured on a website hosted by the PCC. Students will earn a $100 honorarium for each public speaking engagement completed. Students who have completed the program may remain PNW Climate Ambassadors for the duration of their degree. The PNW Climate Ambassadors program is a collaboration between the *Program on Climate Change * (PCC), the *Washington State Climate Office * (WASCO) and the College of the Environment Communications Team. To apply, please submit a single pdf that includes both your two-page CV/resume and a one-paragraph statement of why you want to participate in this program and what you hope to learn. Submit this application, with the subject line ?PNW Ambassador Application? to *uwpcc@uw.edu * by Feb. 1, 2025. Questions? Contact Miriam Bertram at *uwpcc@pcc.edu *. -- Miriam Bertram, PhD Assistant Director, UW Program on Climate Change PCC Office: Ocean Sciences Building Room 335A PCC office phone: 206-543-6521 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: PNWClimateAmbassadorsApplication.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 52269 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Tue Jan 28 08:16:08 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Guillaume Mauger via pccgrads) Date: Tue Jan 28 08:16:25 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: FW: Nooksack Tribe hiring a Hydrologist In-Reply-To: References: <604a425a87a64bb89ee63f0c73f5e1db@nooksack-nsn.gov> Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- De : Susan Dickerson-Lange Date: mar. 28 janv. 2025 ? 07:57 Subject: FW: Nooksack Tribe hiring a Hydrologist To: Sharing this widely ? hoping to help Nooksack Indian Tribe find someone great! *Susan E. Dickerson-Lange, PhD, LHG *(she/her) *Natural Systems Design **+ Coastal Geologic Services* *p* 206-480-1133 *c* 253-225-9909 *From:* Margaret Taylor *Sent:* Monday, January 27, 2025 9:40 AM *Subject:* Nooksack Tribe hiring a Hydrologist Dear Colleagues, We have an exciting opportunity to work on water quantity and quality here in Whatcom County. Nooksack Indian Tribe?s Natural Resources Department is currently hiring for a Hydrologist to work in as part of the Water Resources program. Duties include a mix of field and office work as well as opportunities to contribute to important water rights discussions. Master?s degree and experience in R preferred, but not required. *Closes February 5th*. We appreciate you helping to spread the word so we can find good candidates for this important work. Thank you and please feel free to reach out with any questions. https://workforcenow.adp.com/mascsr/default/mdf/recruitment/recruitment.html?cid=c4b8fc40-76d9-4402-b54c-3303a95fa767&ccId=19000101_000001&type=MP&lang=en_US&jobId=550527 Thank you, Margaret (Maggie) Taylor ------------------------------ Water Resources Program Manager Nooksack Indian Tribe PO Box 157, Deming, WA 98244 O: 360-592-5140 ext.3142 C: 360-603-1514 -- Guillaume Mauger Pronouns: he/him/his Director | Washington State Climate Office 206.685.0317 | gmauger@uw.edu | @WAstateclimate EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Jan 29 10:12:27 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Wed Jan 29 10:13:03 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [Advisers] How To Talk to the Media workshop - FREE at 6:30 PM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: TODAY is the * How to Talk to the Media workshop* from *6:30-8:00 PM* at *HUB 214 * hosted by the Jackson School Student Association! Totally FREE and includes a copy of Lorraine Howell?s book, *Give Your Elevator Speech a Lift!* See the invite below to forward to your community. EVERYONE is welcome. Are you considering a career in politics, government, public relations, or marketing? Want to learn more about public speaking and how to answer tough questions? Then join us TODAY, January 29, from 6:30 ? 8:00 p.m. in HUB 214 for an interactive workshop on *How to Talk to the Media* by seasoned political consultants Cathy Allen and Randy Pepple . With years of experience in political consulting and regular appearances on TV and radio across the nation, Cathy and Randy will share their expertise on how to present a message effectively to wide audiences, and the keys to answering tough questions with confidence. Everyone is welcome. *FREE *and includes a copy of* Lorraine Howell?s book, Give Your Elevator Speech a Lift!* *Date: Wed, January 29, 2025* *Time: 6:30 ? 8:00 p.m.* *Location: Husky Union Building, 4001 E Stevens Way NE, Seattle, WA 98195* *Room: HUB 214* For more information and to stay up to date with all things Jackson School Student Association (JSSA) related, follow us on Instagram @jssa_uw or email us at JSSA@uw.edu! To keep up to date on all our events, please check our Google Calendar here . Best Regards, *The Jackson School Student Association (JSSA)* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-t0kwfbjw.png Type: image/png Size: 1483624 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Jan 29 11:22:22 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Wed Jan 29 11:22:53 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [Proposals due, Feb. 7] Call for Proposals: UW Scholars' Studio In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Seems there are several opportunities out there to work on your public messaging! ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Graduate Student Affairs Date: Wed, Jan 29, 2025 at 11:06?AM Subject: [Proposals due, Feb. 7] Call for Proposals: UW Scholars' Studio To: Graduate Student Affairs Dear GPAs, Please share with your graduate students, thank you! Best, Graduate Student Affairs Team The Graduate School | University of Washington ____________________________________________ *Call for Proposals: Scholars? Studio* Proposals due: Friday, Feb. 7, 2025 by 11:59 p.m. (PST) Virtual event: Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025, 4 pm ? 5 pm Are you a grad student who wants to perfect your presentation skills for a general audience? Submit a proposal to give a 5-min. low stakes and fun lightning talk about your capstone, research, or pedagogy! Scholars? Studio is an opportunity to practice communicating your work in front of a supportive general audience?without using a lot of technical or academic jargon. The winter online event is on Thursday, Feb. 27, 4?5 p.m. Send questions to mundtm@uw.edu. Event partners: UW Libraries Research Commons & Graduate Student Affairs in The Graduate School Learn more and submit a proposal: https://lib.uw.edu/commons/events/scholarsstudio/ Call for proposals flyer: https://grad.uw.edu/wp-content/uploads/WI-25-UW-Scholars-Studio-CFP.pdf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 40394 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 132188 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 30 10:02:18 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam via pccgrads) Date: Thu Jan 30 10:02:50 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [Environment_advisers] Corrected: CQS/QSCI is accepting applications for Spring 2025 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Erica L. Owens via Environment_advisers < environment_advisers@u.washington.edu> Date: Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 9:50?AM Subject: [Environment_advisers] Corrected: CQS/QSCI is accepting applications for Spring 2025 To: environment_advisers@uw.edu , BIOLOGY < bioladv@uw.edu>, SEFS Graduate Program Advising , Economics Advising , AMATH Graduate Program Advisor , statgradadv@stat.washington.edu Cc: BRENDAN WALLACE , Gaj Sivandran , Beth Gardner , qermgrads@uw.edu , Chris Anderson < cmand@uw.edu> Previous email had a typo. Gaj Sivandran will be teaching QSCI 291 in the spring. Here is the corrected version: *Center for Quantitative Science: * *Spring 2025 Teaching Assistant Positions* The Center for Quantitative Science (CQS) is accepting part-time (50% FTE) Teaching Assistant applications for Spring 2025 for the courses listed below. The priority deadline is *Tuesday, February 4,* but we will accept applications until the positions are filled. Priority will also be given to students enrolled in College of the Environment graduate programs. *Q SCI 291: Analysis for Biologists I (1st quarter Calculus)* Up to 2 TA positions, pending enrollment numbers Instructor: Gaj Sivandran *Q SCI 292: Analysis for Biologists II (2nd quarter Calculus)* Up to 2 TA positions, pending enrollment numbers Instructor: Brendan Wallace *Q SCI 381: Introduction to Probability and Statistics* Up to 3 TA positions, pending enrollment numbers Instructor: Beth Gardner *Q SCI 483: **Statistical Inference in Applied Research I* 1 TA position Instructor: TBD * Teaching Assistant (TA) Position Description* Responsibilities: - TAs at 50% FTE should expect to average approximately 20 hours/week, 220 hours for the quarter - Providing occasional lectures - Running labs, help sessions, and recitation sessions - Grading homework and exams - Maintaining office hours - TAs are generally expected to attend the courses to which they are assigned Requirements: - For Q SCI 291 and 292, must be competent in calculus - For Q SCI 381, must be competent in statistics and have familiarity with R - For QSCI 483, must be comfortable with R and the material covered in QSCI 483 (linear regression using least squares, maximum likelihood, model interpretation and selection, GLMs, spatial and temporal models) - Current academic standing as a UW Graduate Student and eligibility to hold a Graduate Student Assistantship - Availability for full appointment and class time frame (see appointment dates above) - Background and enthusiasm to communicate effectively with biology, zoology, conservation, ecology, and natural resource management students - Equivalent education/experience will substitute for all minimum qualifications except when there are legal requirements, such as a license/certification/registration Terms: - A 50% FTE Teaching Assistantship pays a stipend that varies depending on graduate level as indicated on Schedule 1 of the UW TA Salary Chart . Contact the Center for Quantitative Science office for more information on salary levels. - Teaching Assistants will be required to register for a minimum of 10 credits per quarter that they hold an Assistantship. - The operating fee (including tuition) will be paid by CQS. However, the successful applicant will be responsible for paying any student fees (approximately $265). - Graduate Appointee accident/sickness insurance will be provided. - This job classification is governed by a negotiated labor contract and is subject to union shop provisions. *Application Process:* Application Deadline: The priority deadline is *Tuesday**, February 4**,* but we will accept applications until the positions are filled. Applicants will be notified by email of our decision. Priority will also be given to students enrolled in College of the Environment graduate programs. Submit the following to owense@uw.edu: - Resume/CV (in PDF format): - Include your home department, advisor, and academic status (?Masters Student?, ?PhD Student, but haven?t completed general exam?, or ?PhD Student, completed general exam?). - List all previous TA and reader/grader positions held for any UW department. Include your evaluation score for each position. - Cover letter including (in PDF format): - Brief statement of how your skills and experiences are a match for the position - List the specific Q SCI TA position(s) you are applying for - List Q SCI or equivalent courses you have completed Questions? Contact owense@uw.edu. The University of Washington is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. To request disability accommodation in the application process, contact the Disability Services Office at 206.543.6450/206.543.6452 (tty) or dso@u.washington.edu. ----------------------------------- Erica Owens CQS/QERM/QSCI Program Coordinator & Academic Advisor Pronouns: She, her Center for Quantitative Science Quantitative Ecology and Resource Management University of Washington Marine Studies Building (MAR 171) Mailbox #355020 Seattle, WA 98105 (206) 616-9571 _______________________________________________ Environment_advisers mailing list Environment_advisers@u.washington.edu http://mailman12.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/environment_advisers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Jan 30 10:04:54 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Thu Jan 30 10:04:58 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fw: California Council on Science and Technology Policy Fellowship In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi PCC, This fellowship in California for recent PhDs might interest PCC grad students! Applications for next year are open now. One of the current fellows, Haynes Stephens, was a PCC participant (although not a UW student). https://ccst.us/ccst-science-fellows-program/ Best, Abby ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Abigail L. S. Swann, PhD she/her/hers Endowed Professor for the College of the Environment in Climate & Ecosystems Department of Atmospheric and Climate Science Department of Biology University of Washington http://www.atmos.uw.edu/~aswann/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: