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Community Highlights

These highlights feature efforts by the community that are bringing us closer to a modern vision for hydropower. Interested in featuring your project? Contact the Vision team.
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Students stand around a small model of a hydropower turbine.
During Hydro School, students built a model turbine. (Photo by Idaho National Laboratory)

Hydro School Reaches Students and Tribes in Idaho

Tags
Enhanced Collaboration, Education, and Outreach
Workforce Development
Sectors
DOE/National Labs

The future of hydropower is dependent on a well-trained, diverse workforce that is ready to meet industry needs. Hydro School, hosted by Idaho National Laboratory (INL), is one example of hydropower educational outreach that is key to workforce development. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Water Power Technologies Office, INL’s Hydro School summer camp engaged students from the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe to participate in a week-long program. The camp included two days in the classroom, one day in the field, and one day visiting a local hydropower plant, the Idaho Falls Power Hydropower Plant. Students learned about hydropower basics, technologies and applications, and potential career paths, and had opportunities to participate in open dialogue about the their perspectives on natural and cultural resources related to hydropower.  

Learn more about Hydro School

Published on December 13, 2024
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A student watches as a researcher holds a juvenile salmon and tags it with a passive acoustic transmitter.
Students at Salmon Summit learn about fish passage and tagging from hydropower researchers. (Photo by Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)

Salmon Summit Brings Hydropower to Students

Tags
Enhanced Collaboration, Education, and Outreach
Workforce Development
Sectors
DOE/National Labs
Other stakeholders

The Salmon in the Classroom curriculum, sponsored by the Benton Conservation District (BCD), is an annual program in which fourth and fifth grade students across eastern Washington raise fish in the classroom. The curriculum culminates in the release of the fish into the Columbia River during the Salmon Summit, where students learn about fish passage, hydropower, and related careers. With support from the Department of Energy Water Power Technologies Office, researchers from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) partner with BCD bring the latest science on hydropower and fish passage to thousands of students in person and via live stream, including live demonstrations of juvenile salmon tagging and release. 

The educators involved in Salmon in the Classroom are also invited to participate in PNNL’s Teacher-Scientist Partnership—a professional development opportunity for educators to work directly with PNNL researchers and staff to tackle real-world scientific challenges. The program aims to help teachers take real-world problems and lessons—in this case about hydropower—back to their students to inspire the future workforce.  

Learn more about Salmon in the Classroom at the BCD website

Published on June 5, 2024