Dorothy Holley: Fair Winds and Safe Sailing, August 15, 2025

NOAA Teacher at Sea

Dorothy Holley

Aboard NOAA Ship Pisces

July 31 – August 15, 2025

Blog Post #8

Mission: Northeast Ecosystem Monitoring Survey (EcoMon)

Geographic Area of Cruise: Northwest Atlantic Ocean

Date: August 15, 2025

Weather Data from Bridge:

First, Someone named Suzy asked if I am hopeful for the future of our oceans after seeing all the work that is done on my NOAA cruise. I am hopeful every day I get to go to school and see the brilliant young minds that are learning and developing so that they may work to solve our world’s problems. (Read more here). The dedicated people I’ve met through NOAA and on NOAA Ship Pisces remind me that we are using science in productive ways, like taking care of our oceans! Are you learning and doing your part? Thank you for reading and asking questions!

Dorothy, in her Teacher at Sea t shirt, life vest, and orange overalls, stands on deck, holding a sieve filled with sampled plankton. we see two small plankton nets stretched out on a small table behind her.
Dorothy and a plankton sieve

Second, the answers to the math problem from the previous BLOG: If we sorted through 1/8 of our Bongo net sample, and identified 20 krill, then we would estimate there to be 160 krill in the total sample. For part 2, the abundance is estimated as the number of krill expected per cubic meter. If the nets filtered through 5 cubic meters of water, we would expect to find 32 krill per cubic meter in this part of the ocean.  (Alert, we’ll soon be calculating energy density in Chemistry!)

two women sit in adjacent chairs on the flying deck, each looking through binoculars out toward the ocean. in front of them is table with a laptop and a large telephoto lens camera.
Observers Observing!

Science at Sea:  Purpose! On purpose! With purpose!

It is hard to believe that my two weeks onboard NOAA Ship Pisces have come to an end. In many ways, it seems like I have just started. But when I reflect on all that I have learned about the science being done at sea, I realize I have been here long enough for some important things to sink in! I’d like to share some of these things with you.

  1. Many of the Scientists I spoke with said that math wasn’t their thing. You don’t have to like math to do science, you do have to do some math, understand some math, check behind the computers on some math. There is a difference. We don’t live in a binomial world. You can’t say not liking math is a reason to not do math.
  2. Science is a process. It is not a list of boxes to check or things to do. Science is a way of looking at the world. Observe, analyze, reflect, repeat.
  3. Science can be used for good. NOAA Scientists are making our lives better.
  4. We need more scientists. Are you ready? I’m ready to start a new school year sharing the insights I’ve learned as a NOAA Teacher at Sea!
orange overalls scrunched down over two work boots await their next use. behind, there are more orange jackets and overalls hanging or resting on a surface.
Gear is ready for next time!

You do the Math: I’ve worked 12-hour shifts, 3pm-3am each day of the Summer2025 EcoMon meeting Scientists, doing science, seeing Science in action, and developing ways to connect my students with relative, real-world experiences. How many hours of professional development credit should I receive? OR Since a work day is considered to be 8-hours, how many days of “comp time” should I earn?  (Teachers in some schools can earn “compensatory time” for work done outside of the school day, to be used on teacher workdays, not on regular days with students.) Feel free to post a kind reply in the comments.

Yes, that’s a sea horse!

Interesting Things: As a NOAA Teacher at Sea participant, I have had the privilege to work with an awesome Summer EcoMon 2025 crew. I have basked in the joy of focusing on science and ways to bring back some insights to my classroom in North Carolina. Some observations have come more organically than others. For example, on the Pisces, the mission is clear. Every department is working towards the goal of collecting our scientific data, but not in the same way. At school, our departments are also working, but sometimes our goals are in conflict… Increase test scores? Winning football season? Resume booster? Full stomachs? Social conduit? College acceptance? Understand the world? Develop skills? Create citizens? Workforce development? Avoid gun violence? Learn content?

group photo of seven NOAA Corps officers in blue uniforms lined up on the bridge of NOAA Ship Pisces
The Wardroom

NOAA Corps is responsible for operations, safety, and project completion (possibly like school administration) but they must rotate off the ship after 2 years and they don’t make decisions unilaterally. Their well-honed leadership comes in understanding the institutional knowledge of each department.

I wonder what would happen if our school systems invested in clear missions and departmental leadership. I would settle for “just” focusing on science! 😊

view through a round porthole window of ocean water that is mostly calm and pale blue, except for the wake of the ship. the sky reveals a pale sunset.
View from the Wet Lab

Teacher at Sea/ Career Spotlight:

As part of my Teacher at Sea work, I’ve created a game to help my students see many of the people and careers on the NOAA EcoMon cruises. In addition to the Science, NOAA Corps, Deck, and Engineering departments I’ve been able to highlight in my blog posts, the Stewards, Survey, and Electronic Technician departments are also mission critical.  Come to West Johnston to play my Career Exploration game.

I’ve also found ways to integrate real world skills and relevant examples into the content I teach. Next year specifically, we will be honing my “Death at Sea” Forensics Lesson and “Ocean Calorimetry” Chemistry lesson. Finally, I will be leading a session called “Come Sail with NOAA” at the NC Science Teacher’s Association PD conference in November. If you would like to learn more about applying to be a NOAA Teacher at Sea, or a Science Teacher in North Carolina, please come check us out. (read more here: NCSTA)

Dorothy takes a selfie on the deck of NOAA Ship Pisces. In the background, we see the ocean and the sky - though the sunset colors are pretty muted - and the bongo nets resting on a suface.
After our last data collection stop, we checked out the last sunset!

Personal Log: I am thankful for my community – those who have and continue to nurture, teach, and inspire me to observe, learn, enjoy, and be curious! This is going to be the best school year ever!!

moon and its reflection on calm blue waters. a large ship is visible on the horizon at a distance.
Fair winds and safe sailing!

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