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Dr. Guy Harvey Introduces Shark Education Program to Midwest Students

Ohio's St. Mary Central is the first Midwest school to participate in the Shark Education program created by the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation for Florida schools.
guy harvey shark program

guy harvey shark program

Dr. Guy Harvey releasing a mako shark off Isla Mujeres, Mexico. Last month, the team caught and tagged 12 sharks over the course of ten days.

Science class students at St. Mary Central of Martins Ferry, Ohio are joining with thousands of students from Florida to follow the migration patterns of mako, tiger, sand and oceanic white tip sharks on their daily travels through the Atlantic Ocean, The Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.

St. Mary is the first Midwest School to participate in the novel Shark Education program initially created by the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation for Florida schools, where students can study shark species, understand the important role sharks play in a healthy ocean ecosystem and have the ability to daily track sharks that have been caught, tagged with satellite transponders and then released for further research and study.

As part of the Shark Ed Program, St. Mary instructors received classroom posters, which illustrate 19 shark species, shark documentaries on DVDs and a SYKPE classroom tutorial session courtesy of the Guy Harvey Research Institute at Nova Southeastern University’s Oceanographic Center based in South Florida.

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“It’s a great tool for teachers to use in the classroom to spark interest among students in science, and marine science specifically,” said Antonio Fins, Executive Director of the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation.

Fins said that Guy Harvey’s publicist, John Bell, proposed an idea of taking the program to students far from the ocean, and as a former St. Mary Central student he recommended the Martins Ferry school as a test case.

“I think it is working quite well,” said St. Mary Central science teacher Paul Steckler. “All four classes have really enjoyed the documentaries and we will be following the sharks by computer link as well as set up the tutorial for more in-classroom instruction.”

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Students as well as anyone interested can check onto the institute’s interactive online website www.nova.edu/ocean/ghri/tracking to follow the tagged shark movements in near real-time.

The website is an educational outreach component of the institute’s quest to study shark migration patterns, with the ultimate goal being to better understand and protect them, as some species are threatened or endangered due to overfishing and the Asian market for shark fin soup.

Nova Southeastern University’s Guy Harvey Research Institute began tagging mako sharks in 2009 to study their migratory patterns and now undertakes expeditions worldwide to study them. The school’s marine experts have tagged mako sharks as far away as Mexico and New Zealand. In addition to makos, GHRI and Save Our Seas Shark Research Center scientists are also tracking tiger, oceanic white tip and sand tiger sharks, as well as blue marlin.

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Schools interested in the Shark Ed Program and receiving the “Sharks of the World” marine education posters should contact John Bell at prseitz@bellsouth.net.

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