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Project Summary:
A
critical need exists for basic avalanche education for
junior high through college age students in Utah. Just
like students in Hawaii learn about the dangers of rip
tides and shore breaks at an early age, students in
Utah need to learn about avalanches. The rising numbers
of young avalanche victims have demonstrated an obvious
need for basic avalanche education. We hope that the
Know Before You Go avalanche education program will
become a regular part of the curriculum in Utah schools
from junior high through college age students.
This free program is designed as a 50-minute program
in three parts:
- A 15-minute, narrated video showing avalanches,
people triggering avalanches and the destructive power
of avalanches.
- A local avalanche professional will tell their story
about close calls or accidents they have had as they
learned about avalanches.
- A 15 -minute PowerPoint presentation about the
basics of how to recognize avalanche terrain, recognize
obvious signs of instability, safe travel practices,
the basics of avalanche rescue equipment and self-rescue
procedures, and where to obtain information about
current avalanche conditions.
The Know Before You Go program would be taught in participating
schools as an annual assembly, to any gathering of younger
outdoor enthusiasts such as Boy Scout troops or to outdoor
recreation programs at universities. The program is
designed as a turnkey operation in which local avalanche
professionals such as ski patrollers, ski guides and
avalanche educators will give the presentations.
The Know Before You Go avalanche education program is
administered by the Friends of the Utah Avalanche Center,
a non-profit, tax-exempt organization which raises private
funding for the Forest Service Utah Avalanche Center
(FSUAC) and promotes avalanche safety in Utah. The staff
of the FSUAC will supervise the project. The FSUAC staff
is nationally recognized as leaders in avalanche education
and the communication of critical avalanche information
to the public.
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Need
Statement:
- Utah is famous not only for the Greatest Snow on
Earth, but also for its avalanches. One and a half
million Utah residents live immediately adjacent to
some of the most dangerous and easily accessible avalanche
terrain in the United States.
- Over the past eight years, nine young snowboarders
have died in avalanches in Utah. Nationally, avalanche
fatalities continue to rise at an alarming rate.
- On the day after Christmas of 2003, fourteen people
were recreating near Aspen Grove in the runout of
one of the largest avalanche paths in Utah during
one of the most intense snowstorm Utah has experienced
in several years. Three young snowboarders died in
a massive avalanche. Even the most basic avalanche
education could have prevented these deaths.
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Forest Service
Utah Avalanche Center
The Forest Service Utah Avalanche Center has operated
since 1980 and provides daily backcountry avalanche and
mountain weather information to the public who recreate
in Utah’s backcountry. The Utah Avalanche Center
is recognized as one of the top regional avalanche centers
in North America. The Utah Avalanche Center staff has
appeared on over a dozen national and international documentaries
about avalanches and is regularly featured on most of
the national news networks. In addition to forecasting
duties, the UAC staff teaches dozens of avalanche courses
throughout northern Utah each season and is in high demand
as avalanche educators. The center is co-located at the
National Weather Service Forecast Office near the Salt
Lake City Airport.
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Program Implementation:
The
Know Before You Go program was introduced into the Utah
school system by contacting principals and district superintendents.
80 presentations were given in the 04-05 season and nearly
12,000 students saw the program. Topics discussed meet
core curriculum standards in the science, physical education,
and health fields. In its first year, this pilot program
received tremendous accolades by teachers, administrators,
students, and parents alike. The success of this program
could stand on the merits of the shear volume of students
that attended the presentations. Though in addition, it
has received awards from the US Forest Service and the
media outlets did numerous feature stories about the program
both locally and nationally. |
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Finally,
The Know Before You Go program has been reviewed and accepted
by the Utah Board of Education health and physical education
specialist. |
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| Contact: Craig Gordon -
cgordonski@hotmail.com |
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