Conference
Highlights:
Over 350 members
met for the 5th annual NMEA conference on the
Salem
State College campus. Each day, conference sessions began at 8:30 AM
and ended at 3:15 PM, with committee meetings wedged in during and between
sessions. Douglas Brooks, former Executive Director of the National
Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmosphere, led a session on “National
Priorities and Marine Education.” Other sessions were about marine
programs around the country and the procedure for publication of articles
and marine curricula. For example, Dorothy Bjur, Arie Korporaal, and
Jackie Rojas led a workshop on “Compiling a Marine Education Teacher
Training Manual.” In addition, sessions such as Victor Mayer’s
“The Influence of the Great Lakes on the History of the U.S.”
presented historical, biological, and cultural marine information.
Above:
Conference Program
Left:
Souvenir Conference Plate.
Photographs
by Susan Leach Snyder
Captain Irving Johnson
was the Stegner Memorial Lecturer and Deb Hall and Jeff Sandler presented
a dramatic approach to elementary level marine education as “Mr.
and Mrs. Fish.”
Right:
Captain Irving Johnson delivered the Stegner Memorial Lecture. He narrated
the film he took aboard the square-rigged ship Peking, rounding
Cape Horn in 1929! Below: Les Picker (on left) was presented with the
NMEA award for Outstanding Professional Contributions by President Bob
Abrams. Photographer is unknown. Source:
Current, Volume 2, Number 1, Fall, 1980, p. 20 and 21.

At the Board Meeting,
several important issues were discussed:
- representation
of chapters on the Board
- the Executive
Director’s position
- exchange memberships
with related organizations.
The Board of Directors
voted at the annual meeting to accept the petitions of the Northwest
Association of Marine Educators (NAME) and the Connecticut Marine Education
Association to become Chapters of the NMEA. This brought to six the
number of Chapters in the Association. Those not mentioned above are
the Massachusetts Marine Educators (MME), Mid-Atlantic Marine Education
Association(MAMEA), the Gulf of Maine Marine Education Association (GOMMEA)
and the New York State Marine Education Association (NYSMEA). The Board
also approved a motion to exchange no-cost Affiliate memberships with
the Marine Technology Society.
Jim Centorino (MA)
happily reported a profit from the conference of $8,029.93.
In
his article titled "The National Marine Educators' Association...Historical
Notes..." (Current: The Journal of Marine Education,
Volume 8, No.2, 1988, p.9), James A. Lanier had the following to say
about the 1980 conference: "Renny Little’s reception at the
Clipper Captains’ Club paid happy homage to heritage, but other
board meetings were filled with sometimes acrimonious conflict. Dr.
Barbara Spector’s 'Proposal to Insure Permanent Leadership for
Marine Education in the U.S. by Activating, Operating, and Providing
Continuance for the National Marine Education Network and the Council
of Chief State School Officers’ Marine Education Coordinators’
Network' provoked debate even longer than its title.
The
President of NMEA, Bob Abrams (NY), had endorsed this draft Sea Grant
proposal before the conference without even seeing the text. Yet the
first lines of that text described the purpose of the proposal as being
to '...transfer leadership for marine education from Sea Grant to the
Marine Technology Society.'
The
Board of NMEA had many problems with this concept, including the fact
that such a transfer implied a loss of Sea Grant funds (which to some
extent was coming anyway.) There was also concern that NMEA leadership
was being ignored and lingering doubts remained about MTS intentions.
The
Spector proposal was eventually withdrawn for lack of support, but left
a legacy of mistrust. (At a later date, Spector did get signatures of
all 50 state superintendents.) One lesson we may have learned is that
no member of the board, even the president, should ever endorse proposals,
regardless of how 'motherhood and apple pie' they appear, without reading
and discussing them with the rest of the Board."