Additional
Highlights of 1982:
According to the
minutes of March 6, 1982, the Northeast Marine Educational Council met
at the University of Rhode Island Marine Studies Center to discuss NMEA
business with NMEA leaders. Representatives from GOMMEA, MME, NYSMEA,
several NMEA Board Members and Committee Chairs, as well as President-Elect
Prentice Stout, attended the meeting. The major points and issues that
were discussed included:
A. NMEA Dues
and the journal, Current: Several NMEA chapters were suffering
a loss of membership because of the NMEA dues increase. A suggestion
was made that the subscription to Current be separate from
the dues since Current was the Association’s major expense.
Another suggestion was that a group membership be offered. If a class
elected membership at $1, $2, or $3 per student, the teacher would receive
a free membership.
B. Newsletter:
It was suggested that the National act as a clearinghouse and send all
chapters the newsletters of each chapter. Material in the various newsletters
contain valuable information that should go to teachers and students.
The purpose of a newsletter and a magazine are different and this should
be considered. Could there be a compilation of material from the various
newsletters and this sent to the membership?
C. Elections:
There was some disappointment registered about the irregularity of some
of NMEA’s past elections. It was felt by all present that the
terms of President and President-Elect should be two years.
D Membership: The following recommendations were made by members
of the Northeast Marine Educational Council to the NMEA Chapters and
the NMEA Board:
1) a) Membership
in the National Marine Education Association should continue to exist
as either a national individual membership or a combined local/national
membership. b) In the case of the combined national/local membership,
a 50% rebate of national dues should be made to the chapters. c) subscription
to Current will be separate from membership dues.
2) National dues shall be $15.00 for the 1982-83 year.
3) Any change in dues structure must be voted upon by the full Board
at least one year prior to implementation.
4) National should consider having its annual conference in a different
time slot: Examples: Spring break or college break times in the Fall
or Winter; Piggy-back onto local chapter conferences; combination of
a National-Local conference.
E. Recommendation
by Prentice Stout: An Advisory Board of Trustees should be appointed.
This advisory board would be made up of leaders from industry, law,
government, banking, etc.
The end of the 50%
rate for chapter members had been set for two years and ended with the
1981-82 dues year. The Bylaws did state that pro-rata assistance to
the chapters will be provided, but not in what form or how much. Existing
50% rebate ran out in San Diego, and there had been no provision for
an alternative.
Jim Lanier (NC)
(NMEA President) in his Update on NMEA Business (July 26,1982), sent
to the leadership of the NMEA, stated, “Our membership rolls now
stand at 1044, the highest in our history. However, many chapter members
have still not joined NMEA, in violation of the chapter’s agreement
with the National. The chapters are the NMEA. If our support doesn’t
come from there, where will it come from?”
Lanier recommended
that
- National dues
be held to $15.00 for 1982-83, with per capita rebate to the chapters
of $3.00 per member. Dues for 1983-84 should be raised to the level
necessary to support the goals set by the Board.
- NMEA hire an executive
secretary to carry out the routine duties needed to implement policies
established by the elected representatives (preferably for 1983-84).
- The president’s
term be extended to two years. Being President-elect or Immediate past
president is little different from being a board member. This should
start with Prentice Stout.
In 1982, each chapter
was asked to elect a representative to the NMEA Board. In order to provide
staggered terms, the representatives from the following chapters were
selected by lottery to serve initial terms of one year: Connecticut
Marine Education Association, Georgia Association of Marine Education,
Gulf of Maine Marine Education Association, Marine Education Association
of Texas, New Jersey Marine Education Association, New York State Marine
Education Association. Chapter representatives took office at the NMEA
Conference business meeting.
At the Conference
Board Meeting, Jeff Sandler (ME) suggested that the board meet mid-year
as a means of moving business forward.
For
several years, members of NMEA had been working with McManis Associates
Inc, Management and Research Consultants in Washington D.C. in writing
a 5-page grant proposal that NMEA could submit to funding agencies.
In 1982, Vi Lien (PA), Chair of the McManis Project submitted the completed
McManis proposal to the Board for its approval. The Board agreed to
begin submitting the McManis proposal to funding agencies.
The Project/Program
Summary stated, “This is a request for a one-year grant of $10,000
to conduct a strategy development planning study to determine the long-range
goals, funding requirements, and strategy for implementation of a fund
development program for the National Marine Education Association (NMEA).”
After describing
NMEA’s need (“To continue its work and expand its scope
will require sustained revenues which can only be attained through a
well-planned, well-organized development program),” the proposal
went on to describe the goal and the solution, unique qualifications
of NMEA, results and benefits, a plan for measuring success, and resources/time
requirements. (Click on the image
to read the entire proposal)
Thayer Shafer had
departed for Europe some time before the conference, leaving a void
in the leadership of NMEA. The need for a similar “anchor”
position had long been evident. In December, 1982, President Jeff Sandler
proposed that the Board appoint Prentice Stout as executive director.
He also suggested the need for a national headquarters, an idea proposed
by both Shafer and Stout.
In 1982, NMEA published
four issues of Current: The Journal of Marine Education. The
first issue was titled, “Shipboard Programs...A Coast-to-Coast
Sampler.” The second and third issues were general ones. The final
one of the year was titled, “Minorities in Marine Education.”
At the 1982 Conference, a copy of the first edition of the year was
distributed. Inside the cover was an invitation to become a subscriber.
It listed the regular journal features as
- Stateroom
(state news of marine educational activities)
- Gamming
(interviews with marine educators)
- Seafaring
(folklore and history of the sea)
- MEMS: Neptune’s
Library (educational materials listing)
- Marine Literature
(book reviews)
- For the Classroom
(activities you can clip for use in the classroom)
- plus feature articles
on all aspects of marine education
According to a
letter written to the NMEA Board on March 26, 1982 from Fleda Jackson
(Managing Editor), “Our subscriptions have increased to about
1,500, so it is clear that we are providing a publication that is
needed and appreciated."
   
Photographs by Susan Leach Snyder
Click
on Current to obtain a complete listing of articles in the 1976
- 2008 journals.
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