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Perseverance Pays Off: NOAA Concept for Flood Plain Model To Hit Market
WARD'S Stormwater Floodplain Simulation System, which is based on a NOAA prototype, will be available to purchase this fall. Photo credit: With permission from WARD’s Natural Science.
It all started back in 2006, when science teacher Dave Chapman at Okemos High School in Okemos, Mich., approached hydrologist Mark Walton of NOAA’s Grand Rapids weather forecast office about developing a more interactive approach to teaching students about flood risk and hydrology — the study of water movement distribution and quality throughout the Earth. Over the next six months, they worked together to develop a proposal that included flood management curriculum and specifications for a hands-on storm water-flood plain model. With proposal in hand, the pair approached various water management agencies looking for help to make their plans a reality. Officials from the Michigan Stormwater-Floodplain Association liked what they saw. The association provided funds to build two prototypes. “It took some persistence to convince someone to fund the first two prototypes,” Walton said. “Part of that was simply finding the right group. It had to be people who understood the many, complex variables that impact flooding and how changing conditions in a watershed, such as urbanization, impact flood risk.” Walton and Chapman used the models whenever and wherever they found the opportunity: science shows, conferences, career days, water festivals and water management meetings. The model was demonstrated any place people gathered to discuss flooding and water management. Students, teachers, flood experts and water managers were all impressed. During a demonstration at a May 14 Earth science teachers’ conference in Grand Rapids, Mich., another exhibitor, WARD’s Natural Science of Rochester, N.Y., took notice. WARD’s product development managers approached Chapman and Walton about partnering to mass produce the flood plain models. They reached an agreement quickly, and WARD’s is now producing the models under the name “WARD'S Stormwater Floodplain Simulation System.” The product is scheduled to hit the market this fall. “The simulation model and curriculum guide provide teachers with defined activities and procedures that help students visualize the hazards of flooding,” Walton said. As an added bonus, 10 percent of the proceeds from each model sold go to the Michigan Stormwater-Floodplain Association Scholarship Fund. “The National Weather Service [also] gets the satisfaction of knowing we helped provide a hydrologic education tool that will give thousands of students a better understanding of the causes of and the hazards associated with flooding,” Walton said. But, he added, the benefits don’t end there. “We’ve found this model is an effective teaching tool for more than students,” said Walton. “It’s a great tool for giving basic hydrology instruction to people in the water control and water management fields and for the general public.”
Hydrologist Mark Walton of NOAA’s Grand Rapids Weather Forecast Office demonstrates the flood plain model at the Association of State Flood Plain Managers National Conference in Orlando, Fla., in June. Photo credit: With permission from WARD’s Natural Science.
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