Fracking Symposium Highlights Semester-Long Focus of First-Time Class

Bio-geo-chemist Amy Townsend-Small recruited industry, environmental, medical and academic experts to explore the pros and cons fracking for students in her new geology class, "Hhydraulic Fracturing: Implications for Environment, Economics, Policy and the Future."

The award-winning researcher and assistant professor of geology proposed the class as a way to introduce key environmental science lessons through the lens of a topic that’s often highlighted in the media. Fracking is the high-profile and controversial method of extracting natural gas and oil from layers of rock deep underground.

“I learned along with the students,” said Townsend-Small, who has led research about the impact of fracking on sites around the country, including in eastern Ohio. 

Her University of Cincinnati McMicken College of Arts & Sciences class featured local, regional and national experts, stretching far beyond the usual suspects in geology. Students heard from environmental historian David Stradling as well as researchers in the College of Medicine’s Department of Environmental Health, representatives of the Sierra Club and the Environmental Defense Fund and local environmental lawyer and UC alumnus David Altman. She rounded out her roster of experts with representatives from industry, including Wickstrom Geoscience and GHD Associates.

“It was interesting to watch the students’ views evolve based on critical analysis of the readings and guest lecturers,” said Townsend-Small, who is working on developing more upper-level classes in the areas of energy and sustainability.

More than 50 faculty, staff and students attended a Fracking Symposium that marked the end of the semester. The symposium, which took place in TUC Cinema on Nov. 30, featured talks about the history of shale development, hydraulic fracturing job opportunities for graduates with geology degrees, the connection between fracking and earthquakes and the implications of divestment.

Related Stories

2

Washington Post: The hour after leaving day care is a...

May 6, 2024

The Washington Post highlighted research led by University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children's Hospital researchers that found kids eat fewer healthy foods and take in 22 percent of their day’s added sugar intake in the single hour after they’re picked up from child care.

3

Information Security Roadshow spreads awareness

May 3, 2024

The University of Cincinnati's Office of Information Security launched a series of 18 in-person sessions from January to April 2024, drawing nearly 350 attendees from the staff of various UC colleges and units. The Information Security Roadshow series aimed to equip the audience with knowledge on prevailing cyber threats, prevention strategies, how to report incidents and resources to stay informed and secure.

Debug Query for this