Saturday, May 24, 2008

WFA Training

Hoo boy! A busy trio of days for me. Thursday and Friday were devoted to an intensive 16-hour Wilderness First Aid training course (WFA). And today I led a twelve-hour field trip to Shenandoah National Park.

As you may recall, I got a grant to cover the tuition for six instructors (four from NOVA, two from Thomas Nelson Community College in Hampton, VA) to get WFA Training. Because he is totally cool, my dean also threw in $500 to cover an additional two instructors from our division on the NOVA-Annandale campus.

So, thanks to the grant and my dean's add-on, eight people who lead field trips for the Virginia Community College System got free Wilderness First Aid training! I'm pretty excited about that. Now, I think we stand a much better chance of saving a student's life if something were to go wrong on a trip.

The training was pretty intensive. Nancy Chamberlain of our Parks & Recreation program organized the event (assisted by geology student Quinn F.), and kept us well fed. The training itself was provided by Wilderness Medical Associates. They did a great job.

Here's the crew:

WFAs

From left to right, that's Victor Zabielski (NOVA-Alexandria), Beth Doyle (NOVA-Alexandria & Annandale), Jen Martin (TNCC), Erik Burtis (NOVA-Woodbridge), Pete Berquist (TNCC), Ken Rasmussen (NOVA-Annandale), me (NOVA-Annandale), and Kirk Goolsby (NOVA-Annandale).

Pete and I are both products of the undergraduate geology program at William & Mary, he in 2001, and I in 1996. Here, Pete splints my simulated "broken leg":

Pete_Callan_WFA_small

(That's the way we are down at William & Mary. We help each other out.)

Do you lead field trips? Do you know what to do if a student breaks a leg? ...or goes into anaphylactic shock? ...or gets a stick through their eyeball? I'm sure glad I have answers to these questions now, and would recommend this (or more?) medical training to anyone who takes students more than 2 hours away from professional medical help. There's some serious @#%* that can go down in the backcountry. I feel like field trip leaders have an obligation to get trained in how to handle that @#%*.

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Got some grants!

I got word yesterday that I got two grants from the Virginia Community College System. One is to fund WFA training for our field-trip-leading instructors. The lucky recipients of this training include geologists at NOVA, biologists at NOVA, and geologists and biologists from Thomas Nelson Community College in Hampton, VA. The second grant helps fund the development of a NOVA-centric Physical Geology lab manual -- my colleague Ken Rasmussen and I will put this together over the summer for use in the fall semester. So, I'm happy: this is good news for pursuing some side projects that I wanted to see happen. However, I also got shut down on another grant proposal: the Northern Virginia Community College Educational Foundation did not see fit to fund my proposed scouting excursion to prepare for next summer's Northern Rockies Regional Field Geology course, which basically means that one's going to be on my own nickel. Oh well: I'll be out west anyhow...

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