Solar Cells Info

Your Ad Here

Pagevisits since Nov. 8,2006:

Common Ground High School Celebrates Launch of Solar Energy Curriculum for Teachers; Dedicates Solar Installation

December 20th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Installations

100 Teachers from 61 Connecticut Towns to Participate
Rocky Hill, Conn., December 5, 2007
Source: Connecticut Clean Energy Fund, Press release
http://www.ctinnovations.com/news/349.php

Common Ground High School of New Haven today hosted the launch of a solar energy curriculum program for teachers. Designed by the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund (CCEF), Learning for Clean Energy Innovation (LCEI) will focus initially on solar energy education and will later be expanded to cover fuel cell and wind energy. LCEI professional development sessions will incorporate a specially designed curriculum aligned with the Connecticut Department of Education’s Science Frameworks, and will be offered to 9th-grade teachers from the 61 towns in the state who are participating in the 20% by 2010 Campaign.

“Common Ground has modeled environmental practices on site for a decade,” said Oliver Barton, director, Common Ground High School New Haven Ecology Project. “This collaboration with CCEF adds solar electricity production and monitoring to our campus and provides schools across the state with real-time data for energy research with students. Like the carbon-offset value of the photovoltaic system, the education value now extends well beyond the walls of this school.”

LCEI’s launch at Common Ground High School was held in conjunction with the dedication of a 2-kW solar array installed by Pioneer Valley PhotoVoltaics (PV Squared) on the school’s roof. A monitoring system developed by Heliotronics, Inc., will provide solar energy data, making the LCEI solar energy education unit the first in the state to use real-time information from solar arrays located on school buildings in Connecticut Clean Energy Communities.

“The Connecticut Clean Energy Fund has developed a phenomenal education program. Utilizing state-of-the-art data displays, this program teaches science and math in the timely and highly relevant context of renewable energy,” said Clayton Handleman, president and chief executive officer of Heliotronics, Inc. “Heliotronics is thrilled to have been chosen as the provider of software and Internet displays for this well-crafted, innovative program.”

In the coming year, a total of 100 teachers from 61 towns statewide will receive training in the use of the LCEI solar energy curriculum.  “I salute Common Ground High School, the City of New Haven and the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund for their commitment to clean energy and for their efforts to educate future generations about the importance of renewable energy sources,” said Gov. M. Jodi Rell. “Support from today’s young people will be vital to our ability to advance not only solar but other clean energy technologies for the benefit of all.”

The solar array at Common Ground was earned by the City of New Haven through CCEF’s Connecticut Clean Energy Communities program. Under this program, Connecticut cities and towns may earn the designation of “Connecticut Clean Energy Community” and, in the process, earn solar arrays from CCEF. To become a Connecticut Clean Energy Community, New Haven first had to commit to the 20% by 2010 Clean Energy Campaign, led by SmartPower, Clean Water Fund, Environment Northeast and the Interreligious Eco-Justice Network. In 2004, the City became the first municipal government in New England to commit to this campaign. Today, 61 cities and towns in Connecticut – as well as the State itself – have joined the campaign, which has inspired similar pledges to support clean energy in other states.

“We have a strong commitment toward becoming a more environmentally friendly and healthy city,” said Mayor John DeStefano, Jr. “The installation of this solar panel and our participation as a Connecticut Clean Energy Community further our goal of moving toward the use of cleaner, greener energy sources city-wide.”

Lise Dondy, president of CCEF, commented, “We have much to celebrate today. The installation at Common Ground will serve as a valuable teaching and learning tool and will provide real-time solar energy data to students around the state through the Learning for Clean Energy Innovation program. It is commendable that the first of the city’s earned PV systems will bring solar energy to life in an interactive way for both teachers and students.”  “New Haven has enthusiastically embraced clean energy, having earned 20 kilowatts of solar PV from CCEF through our special incentive program – a remarkable achievement,” Dondy added.

At the ceremony, special guest Jerome Ringo, president of Apollo Alliance and immediate past chair of the National Wildlife Federation, offered remarks. Apollo Alliance is a broad-based coalition – representing more than 17 million people across the country – that is dedicated to making America independent from foreign energy in 10 years.

Leave a reply