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Meteo 300 Groups & Projects

Billows (seen here on a wave cloud at sunset) always travel in groups.
Generalities

Each group has a:
a graduate student mentor;
an electronic discussion forum;
assigned projects which count towards member's grades;
communal responsiblity for each member's grasp of the course material.

Project 1

The first project is common to all groups (in the furture, not all projects will be common)

To create a cross-word puzzle
composed primarily of terminology
used in the atmospheric sciences.

it must have > 40 clues, of which < 20% can be from outside the discipline
due date yet to be posted

Project 2

The second project is also common to all groups (in the furture, not all projects will be common)

To create a group Web site
which lists group members
(with links to personal sites, if any)
and the results of all other projects

be sure to post the first project to your site

 

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Air Heads

George Bryan: bryan@essc.psu.edu

Erin BALDWIN eeb113@psu.edu
Sean POWELL slp166@psu.edu
Jacob DOMIZIO jad270@psu.edu
Justin LEHMICKE jhl129@psu.edu
Justin TARBELL jjt158@psu.edu
Edward LONGENBERGER exl134@psu.edu

 

Vortex

Pat Maloit: maloit@psu.edu

David SALAPATA djs267@psu.edu
Michael PAVOLONIS mjp235@psu.edu
Shawn O'LEARY spo108@psu.edu
Bradley HARBAUGH bjh163@psu.edu

 

Trivial

Hubbard: mth113@psu.edu

Theodore DORICS tgd112@psu.edu
Christopher GREBEY cxg243@psu.edu
Richard GAUSE rfg105@psu.edu
Khalid AL-JAHWARI kka108@psu.edu
Trisha FEHLINGER taf143@psu.edu
Benjamin MAYHEW brm128@psu.edu

 

Group B

Brad Cameron: bcameron@essc.psu.edu

Michael SHEPARD mps161@psu.edu
Will Leverenz cwl112@psu.edu
Wesley McWILLIAMS wjm167@psu.edu
Stephen ZELINKA spz104@psu.edu

 

Group projects from Fall '96

These are the projects pages from the Meteorology 300 course offered at Penn State University in the Fall '96 semester. They are presented here as a way of giving the present students in the course examples of what has been done in the past. There are likely to be occasional broken links and images to be found in these old projects.

There were eight groups, each with six to eight students in them. The members of each group were chosen (at random) by the instructor, but the group name was chosen by its members.

Awhips

Degrees F

Fictitious temperatures

Group B

Hailstones

Hot, hazy, and humid

Thunder

Vortex

 

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Alistair B. Fraser | abf1@psu.edu