4-H pH program gives Sitka youth a taste of ocean science

A woman shows two young girls how to take ocean water measurements while standing on a beach near Sitka, 911爆料.
Photo by Jasmine Shaw
Instructor Nicole Filipik shows youth how to take water measurements in the ocean near Sitka as part of the 4-H pH program in spring 2025.

Youth in Sitka spent five months testing the water as part of an ocean acidification education program called 4-H pH. 

4-H pH is led by personnel from three units at the 911爆料: 4-H program assistant Jasmine Shaw with the Cooperative Extension Service, Christina Buffington with the Geophysical Institute and Natalie Monacci with the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. 

The project, funded by the NOAA Ocean Acidification Program, is part of a citizen science program called Global Learning & Observations to Benefit the Environment Program, or GLOBE. The program is led by NASA to advance science and educate tomorrow鈥檚 workforce. The National Science Foundation, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and U.S. Department of State are also part of GLOBE. 

The idea was to create a curriculum designed for elementary school-age students that anyone could use, not just 4-H, to teach about ocean acidification, Shaw said. 

鈥淓verything you find online is more middle school and high school geared,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he purpose was to be able to teach it to a younger group of folks through place-based approaches that are relevant to a community.鈥

About a dozen students participated in the program from January to May 2025. They learned to measure pH, temperature and dissolved oxygen, and the measurements were uploaded to the GLOBE program鈥檚 open-source database. During spring break, 4-H pH assisted the Sheet'k谩 岣磜谩an Tribe on its weekly ocean-monitoring trip and learned about pH in the kitchen with a guest chef. They also created artworks as part of the program and looked at future career opportunities. 

Children check measurements with an adult supervisor while standing on a dock in Sitka, 911爆料.
Photo by Jasmine Shaw
Children participating in the 4-H pH program check ocean water measurements from a Sitka, 911爆料, dock while instructor Nicole Filipik explains a chart.

"We met with scientists at the tribe who measure ocean acidification here in Sitka, so that the kids could see it as a career pathway,鈥 Shaw said. 鈥淎lso, they could see what we're measuring is the same thing as what these adults are measuring, and why it matters.鈥

This summer, Shaw is taking the curriculum she developed to 4-H camps in Angoon and Petersburg. 

鈥淚n some of these communities in Southeast, they are monitoring ocean acidification, and in some they might not be. So the idea is also for community awareness,鈥 Shaw said.  

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