Dear colleagues,

Applications are now open for the 2025 River Field Scholar Professional
Development Program
Applications due *February 5th, 2025:*
https://qualtrics.nau.edu/jfe/form/SV_e9yaa88qej7jCom
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The RIVER Field Studies Network (RIVER) is an NSF Research Coordination
Network in Undergraduate Biology Education framed around connecting rivers,
people, and science through immersive field-based education. Two central
objectives of the network are to build instructor capacity and create
interdisciplinary open-source lesson content to be shared across the
network.

You can learn more about our network here:
OVERVIEW - https://youtu.be/ewmtbeqoxrQ?si=LTlqoMINuoE6sty2
<https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fyoutu.be%2FewmtbeqoxrQ%3Fsi%3DLTlqoMINuoE6sty2%26fbclid%3DIwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR0rkcokvq1vAYa5lf5RLfEfZTN3ZXLaj7bVgnOd8pEaigVwLS5cQSSmyVo_aem_MhHscmF2KE4YGAMCnCrbdw&h=AT0XfQ5sGsgVgAxhkgW5VzpmBVgJRFI_ReR6PC1eRZiqycJZOS4HFReh3ULEkQO_wdO0joQwRRnYmw1JxQmiSKtVpX2qUcBZBrmnba1RSv-x3DtPwyaGeWXiqR8tZt1WxrfR0AI&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT0Jo-7K4O-XnvwyZ3FEHV9KcMM6UtkF85i_CxzayYxcGQvnYUQ1DuYxrWzGcC5r3Wh8TXOFdof5pmUSPRxu550yu7GaNvF7v_0mmExsA1AfL6ATcNLHhX4lTm-D8JHezlKySMhmLC0gHkifhmDCAbbhxA86L7-pg9o72gKlx4nhwFR26aCMWDi4krG1ixWF>
 *2024 RFSN YEAR IN REVIEW Presentation* <https://youtu.be/evVAg0Kt8L0> -
https://youtu.be/evVAg0Kt8L0

RIVER is excited to begin recruiting the next cohort for the RIVER
Instructor & Curriculum Professional Development (aka “RIVER Scholars”)
Program. This program integrates expert instruction and peer mentoring in
virtual and field settings to build instructor capacity to develop and lead
safe and effective river-based field lessons and courses. Participants will
“learn by doing” as they work together to create, practice, and disseminate
new open-source content as well as gain knowledge and proficiency in:
>Field-specific pedagogy concepts and practices
>Interdisciplinary approaches to river studies
>Strategies for increasing DEI in field settings
>River-specific safety & risk management concepts and practices
>Leading day and overnight river field trips
>Publishing lesson content to online open-source dissemination outlets
In addition, we anticipate participants will develop a greater:
>Sense of support and belonging to the River STEM community
>Connection to rivers as a place for learning and discovery
>Commitment to fostering stewardship of riverine ecosystems

Other Benefits
All participant costs will be covered - including travel to the in-person
River Rendezvous and training. In addition, each participant will receive a
$1,000 stipend upon completing the program and publishing a new QUBES river
field lesson. The expectation is that the creation of the lesson involves
approximately 40 hours of effort spread over the Spring, Summer, and Fall.
The estimated total value of the program is $3,000 per participant.
Program Outline
Outcomes will be achieved through a 10-month training and mentoring cycle
(March 2025 - January 2026). The training cycle is framed around a series
of virtual webinars & activities about river field studies and lesson
development in the spring, an in-person field “River Rendezvous” to gain
firsthand instruction on place-based lesson development and gain in field
expertise in the summer, virtual webinars & activities framed around lesson
development, publication, dissemination, and scaling from lessons to
courses in the fall, and culminates with a virtual winter symposium to
showcase new materials to the network and new cohort.
Participants will work over the program to produce one interdisciplinary
field lab that will be published to the RFSN QUBES hub and other online
repositories as appropriate. Each participant is expected to create 1 new
lesson and support other members in their cohort by providing feedback and
peer review to each other.

See examples of past lessons at our QUBES resource library
<https://qubeshub.org/community/groups/riverfieldstudiesnetwork/freshwater_resources_on_qubes>
 -
https://qubeshub.org/community/groups/riverfieldstudiesnetwork/freshwater_resources_on_qubes
The successful applicant must be able to commit to the following program:
Spring 2025. Participate in ~6 hours of professional development in the
Spring term (~ 1 60 min ZOOM activity per month in March, April, and May
plus readings, meeting prep time). Spring will focus on preparing for the
in-person River Rendezvous and starting to develop ideas for your own new
river field lesson. You’ll bring these ideas to the River Rendezvous where
you can share them and “workshop” them with mentors and other participants
into fully envisioned lesson plans.
Summer 2025. Attend the River Rendezvous to be held on the Cheat River, WV
May 28-June 3, our flagship “in person and on the river” community building
and training event. The event will be supported by the professional team at
West Virginia University Outdoor Recreation Program, Adventure WV. The
Cheat River is a powerful example of environmental restoration. Once
severely polluted by acid mine drainage, particularly after the devastating
1994 Muddy Creek blowout, the river has made a remarkable recovery thanks
to extensive remediation efforts. These efforts have not only improved
water quality and restored vital habitat for fish and other aquatic
species, but also revived the river's recreational value, boosting local
economies through tourism. The Cheat's story serves as a model for
restoring waterways impacted by resource extraction, highlighting the
effectiveness of various treatment methods and the resilience of natural
systems. While challenges remain, the Cheat River offers hope and valuable
lessons for achieving lasting environmental recovery through community
involvement, scientific research, and persistent effort.
This rendezvous will consist of a base camp and day trips to different
sections of river explored by raft, stand-up paddle board, kayak, and
canoe. No prior rafting or camping experience or gear is required to
participate. In addition to developing community with your cohort and
mentors, learning practical field skills, and workshopping your lesson
ideas, you will learn from local experts and diverse stakeholders about
this historically significant event. July - August following the Rendezvous
we do not meet but participants are encouraged to continue their work to
develop lesson plans. To get a sense of the feel of a River Rendezvous see
this slideshow from 2023 Rendezvous on the San Juan River.
Fall 2025. Participate in ~10 hours of professional development in the fall
term (~ 1 60 min ZOOM activity per month September, October, November, plus
meeting preparation). In addition, participants will continue to write,
test out, revise, and publish lessons to the QUBES hub. The expectation is
that each participant would develop a lesson idea that will get workshopped
at the River Rendezvous, then they will return to their home watershed and
test it out with local students (this could be as part of a class they are
teaching, or ad hoc with a handful of “student” volunteers, etc.), then
write up and share their draft lessons for feedback from other river
scholar peers, incorporate any feedback, publish their lessons to our QUBES
lesson library, and present their lesson to the network at the Winter
Gathering.
Winter 2025-26. Present new lessons to the network community at the winter
virtual workshop. Completion of the program and disbursement of the stipend
occurs when lessons have been published and presented. Lessons from the
2023 cohort featured in this NotebookLM “Deep Dive” Conservation outreach
podcast <https://youtu.be/NolQ46BSiNg>.

Eligibility
This program is open to instructors who already teach or aspire to teach
interdisciplinary, immersive field lessons and/or courses focused on
riverine ecosystems. Our focal audience is instructors who teach
college/university-level STEM content. Still, those serving non-traditional
students or teaching in other fields (e.g., Indigenous Knowledge,
Experiential Education, etc.) are also encouraged to apply. Participants
must be willing to participate in the program activities outlined above to
develop a new open-source curriculum module. We are particularly interested
in supporting instructors from underrepresented backgrounds or who serve
underrepresented populations.
To Apply
Please complete this application by Monday, February 4th, 2025 to receive
full consideration. Please share this opportunity with anyone you think
would be interested. Note that selection is likely to be highly
competitive. Last year we had > 60 applications and we only have 10 - 12
spaces available. We anticipate < 15% selection rate. Competitive
applicants will need to provide well-developed and thought-out responses to
application prompts. Given so many great applications - Why should we
select you?
Questions can be directed to RFSN membership and DEI committee chair,
Denielle Perry (denielle.pe...@nau.edu) or James Vonesh (jrvon...@vcu.edu)


*ALSO! Register now for our virtual Winter Gathering!*

Please consider joining us for our virtual *Winter Gathering, on 27 January
2025 **1-3 pm Pacific/4 - 6 pm Eastern* at the 2025 River Field Studies
Network virtual Winter Gathering.

The winter gathering will feature:


   - New open-source QUBES lessons created by the 2024 River field scholar
   cohort
   - A keynote presentation by Dr. Ryan Emmanuel (Duke University)
   <https://nicholas.duke.edu/people/faculty/emanuel>. "Whose watershed?
   Reimagining Indigenous Land Acknowledgements for Engaged River Science"
   - A look ahead at plans for 2025

Register here to receive the ZOOM link - https://forms.gle/F8vCMwvG1G63grUQ8
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Thanks again for your interest!

Best - the RFSN leadership team
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