Most of us who have been through a course or two in
meteorology know that it requires more than just looking outside your window
and seeing what the current weather is. I
remember my days as an undergraduate student sitting in a cozy classroom surrounded
by di-fax maps along the “map wall” during my meteorology classes and wondering
how in heck are all of these topics relevant to weather forecasting especially
in severe weather. I was a little green back then. I attended Millersville University which is
about 60 miles outside of Philadelphia where the terrain, road network and the
abundance of trees made it less than ideal for storm chasing, although it did
not discourage the hardcore students from going out. Their adventures usually ended up in wild
goose chases.
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Image taken from e-education page from PSU. |
Fast forward to my graduate school days, where I attended
Texas Tech University for my master’s degree.
Although I lived in a great area where supercell thunderstorms were
plentiful, I was not the type of storm enthusiast that would deploy for every
slight risk day issued by the Storm Predication Center.
I was more of a calculated storm chaser.
I opted more for textbooks and theories than
going out in the field this is what I was accustom to in my undergraduate
study.
It was not until my second year at Texas Tech that I saw my
first “live” tornado. I had been out various
times storm chasing with my buddies before that day. My previous chases were
unsuccessful with respect to observing a tornado. I still recall that moment when I saw my first
tornado somewhere near Altus, OK. It was
such an adrenaline rush and thrilling experience. I was hooked after that day.
While finishing my Ph.D. work at Saint Louis University, I
still ventured out once in awhile in pursuit of these elusive weather
phenomena.
During my time at Saint Louis
University in the early 2000s, professional storm-chasing tours were becoming
very popular.
I recalled having a
conversation with a friend and discussing why we couldn’t get academic credits
for storm chasing by providing our observations in a written report with data about
our experiences.
In my academic journey,
what I have learned is that visual observation helps to correlate the difficult
theories much better than reading from a textbook alone.
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A LP supercell west of Julesburg, CO in 2013. |
My belief is that as meteorologists, we are trained to be keen
observers in and outside of our work environments. Seeing weather phenomena up close is a way to
understand them better, providing a natural connection with theories that cannot
be taught in the classroom with still images. In my current position as a professor of meteorology at
Metropolitan State University of Denver (MSU Denver), I wanted to develop a
course that would require students to experience “real” weather instead of
looking at a computer screen or reading a textbook all the times.
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El Reno on May 31, 2013. |
In recent years, numbers of programs that have started
taking students out storm chasing officially (University of Illinois, SUNY
Brockport, Rutgers University, Western Kentucky University, and College of
DuPage to name a few). The trend of this type of a course/experience has been
gaining popularity among 4-year institutions offering a bachelor degree in
meteorology.
So during the summer of
2012, I teamed up with Scott Landolt (who works for NCAR, an alumnus of MSU Denver
and an adjunct professor) to co-instruct a course that requires students to go
out and experience real weather. The course is called, “Weather Analysis and
Observation.”
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Supercell west of Sidney, NE in 2014. |
This field-based course is intended to combine classroom
theories with actual field observations.
Students who are enrolled in this course are at various stages of their
meteorological education.
This course
requires students’ to make their own convective forecast in the morning, which
they then discuss with other students and professors, take observations of
basic weather variables at different stages of a storm’s evolution, and lastly,
write a detailed report on their storm observation periods (SOP) after the
course’s 2-week “observation” period is over. This report typically consists of
a case-study analysis of multiple SOPs where they discuss initial forecasts,
how the storms evolved, whether or not their forecasts verified and an
explanation if it did not along with photographic evidences of the storm at
various phases with explanations of the storm structures observed. Ultimately,
the end goal of the course is for students to apply what they have learned in
the field and be able to bring it back to the classroom environment.
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Students taking in the awesomeness of real weather. |
2 comments:
Excellent post, Sam. I agree - there is nothing better than being able to observe the behaviors of the atmosphere first hand. The ultimate "in situ" observation.
I wouldn't call the classroom in Roddy "cozy" (I'm sure you've seen the new classrooms!) as I remember when we had to forecast from a converted closet!
Roddy Lab + Sun computers = Old Time Fun!
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