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Thanks to Miami President Gregory P. Crawford and Provost Elizabeth Reitz Mullenix for saying hello and joining Dragonfly staff and facilitators and advisors from our AIP sites for a photo outside Roudebush Hall, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.

Hello,


In late September Dragonfly held our first in-person Advanced Inquiry Program (AIP) retreat since the pandemic began and welcomed leaders from our zoo and botanical garden AIP sites to campus. We cannot say enough great things about our AIP collaborators. They're helping to guide incredible Miami students, who are conducting important conservation projects in their communities. Thanks to all who traveled from throughout the country to the Oxford campus to engage in another productive, engaging retreat! Scroll down to see more retreat photos! And, of course, we hope you enjoy reading below about the great work of our Dragonfly students.


In the spirit of inquiry,

The Dragonfly Team

Let us know you're interested in applying for summer 2023
Register for an upcoming Dragonfly webinar to learn more

Dragonflies in the News


Mark your calendar...


Mark your calendar for International Education Week (IEW) in November and Global Initiatives' IEW events including an essay-video-photo contest. Last year's contest winners included four Global Field Program (GFP) graduate students: Kevin Browning, Cassie Klein, Ginger Levinson, and Kylee Yam. Read more

"Respect the Locals" earns Maine SeaGrant


AIP graduate student Sue Perkins of Brunswick, Maine, was awarded a Maine SeaGrant to develop a pop-up educational booth, called "Respect the Locals," as part of her conservation outreach and AIP coursework. And last month Perkins presented about her graduate research on the presence of white sharks in the Gulf of Maine. Read more

Passion for raptors earns student local scholarship


AIP graduate student Jennifer Redmond of Denver, Colorado, has received the Jerry Liguori Scholarship, which will help further her master’s work connecting her community to American kestrel conservation. Her passion for raptors began when she released a rehabilitated American kestrel. "Watching the male kestrel take flight and return to the wild was a thrill and shaped my future!" Read more

Making climate change a big issue for young students 


AIP graduate student Kylie Wash of New York, New York, focuses on climate change and young students in a recent article she wrote for Edutopia. "Community science cuts the anxiety of teaching climate change for me and my students, and it is more enriching than I ever imagined," she writes. Read more

Marine policies in Baja California


GFP graduate student Alissa Eurell of Williamsburg, Virginia, explains how marine policies in Baja California, Mexico, have affected wildlife and the roles that local people play in conservation issues. In her article in SEVENSEAS Media, Eurell writes, "Concerns around socio-economics and the livelihood of locals need to be taken into consideration when putting restrictions on fisheries." Read more

Toshiba grant award winner


AIP graduate student Heidi Edwards of Oakwood, Ohio, has been named a recipient of the 2022 Toshiba America Foundation grant. The funds will enable Edwards and her students to restore their school’s greenhouse. “Trading the brick walls of a classroom for glass, swapping textbooks for shovels and dirt ... are possibilities with the implementation of the greenhouse project," said Edwards. Read more

APEX Award for environmental writing


AIP graduate student Meg Sczybra of Portland, Oregon, is a recipient of the 2022 APEX Grand Award for environmental writing. With more than 1,200 entries this year, just 100 winners were selected. Sczybra won for an article she wrote for the American Bankers Association Bank Compliance Magazine about the impacts of climate change to our global economy. ABA made her article the cover story, publicized it in their daily email, and provided it for free. Read more

Dragonflies: Please keep us posted about your work!


If you are a Dragonfly student, alumni, instructional team member, or partner, have you presented at a conference, had a paper published, been awarded a fellowship, or received some other form of recognition? Has your local paper recognized a project you've been a part of? We know that you're doing great things, so we invite you to submit news for us to share through the Dragonfly share form. 

AIP Retreat Highlights

Attending the multi-day retreat at Miami were AIP leads from all 10 of our current AIP sites and representatives from two potential new AIP sites. The AIP group also visited the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. Clockwise from top left: Jacksonville Zoo and Garden advisor, Jamie Lankenau, at the Cincinnati Zoo; a Cincinnati Zoo lemur; our group heading to Miami's Pearson Hall; our group with Brett Harper, son of Cincinnati-based modernist wildlife artist Charley Harper; roasting marshmallows at the zoo; a snow leopard at the zoo.

Let us know you're interested in applying for summer 2023
Register for an upcoming Dragonfly webinar to learn more

A transformative education initiative within Miami University's department of biology, Project Dragonfly oversees the world's largest graduate degree programs dedicated to community-driven ecological and social change. Dragonfly students join the frontlines of community innovation, working across an extraordinary network of leading U.S. zoos, botanical gardens, and community organizations around the world. Dragonfly offers the Advanced Inquiry Program and the Global Field Program master's degrees which combine online and on-site experiential learning, as well as individual field courses through Earth Expeditions.


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Project Dragonfly

111 Upham Hall, Bishop Circle

Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056

513.529.8576, dragonfly@miamioh.edu

www.ProjectDragonfly.MiamiOH.edu


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