Schedule at a Glance

Monday–Tuesday, November 15–16
8:00 am–5:00 pm – Pre-workshop Sessions (additional fee)
8:00 am–5:00 pm – NAI Board Meeting (members are welcome)

Tuesday, November 16
8:00 am–5:00 pm – Pre-workshop Sessions (additional fee)
7:00–9:00 pm – Opening Reception in Exhibit Hall

Wednesday, November 17
8:00–10:15 am – Welcome and Keynote, Jeremy Spoon, Ph.D.
10:45 am–3:15 pm – Concurrent sessions
3:30 pm – Region Meetings
Evening – Special Events (additional fee for some)

Thursday, November 18
8:00–9:00 am – General Session and Awards
9:15 am–3:15 pm – ConcurrentS essions
3:30 pm – Section Meetings
7:00 pm – Excellence in Interpretation Awards

Friday, November 19
8:00 am–5:00 pm – Off-site Sessions (additional fee)
7:00–10:00 pm – Scholarship Auction

Saturday, November 20
8:15–9:45 am – Welcome and Keynote, Sharon Schafer
9:45 am–4:15 pm – Concurrent Sessions
6:00 pm–midnight – Fellow Award Presentation, Banquet, and Karaoke (additional fee)

Keynote Speakers

Jeremy Spoon, PhD
“Drawing Meaningful Connections: Interpreting Indigenous Relationships with Ancestral Landscapes in Participatory Ways”

Jeremy is assistant professor of anthropology at Portland State University and a research associate at The Mountain Institute in Washington D.C. His interests in local ecological knowledge, environmental sustainability, mountainous protected areas, place-based spirituality, and political economy have led him on a unique path to interpretation’s door. His focus on connecting indigenous people and interpretation has taken him from Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park to Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest) National Park (Nepal), Hell’s Gate National Park (Kenya) and now to the Great Basin where he has conducted efforts that facilitate people from seven nations of indigenous Nuwuvi (Southern Paiute/Chemehuevi) to tell their stories in the public forum of interpretation.

He is collaborating with these seven nations to create interpretive and educational content for a planned visitor center, trails, campgrounds, and picnic areas in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area. A group of tribally designated representatives co-conducted the research and writing for the project. They also created text for the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and Vegetation Plan—ensuring that the proposed developments are culturally appropriate to the nations that consider the Spring Mountains to be their creation place and an important source of resources.

A second local project funded by the Southern Nevada Public Lands Management Act (SNPLMA) is creating a government-to-government consultation method for these seven nations and the U.S. Forest and Fish and Wildlife Services by generating proposed collaborative consultation and resource management plans for multiple protected areas in southern Nevada. Ecological knowledge is also being collected from indigenous expert knowledge-holders, who will also serve on resource management advisory committees that conduct forest surveys. Finally, families will be invited to harvest pine nuts—promoting intergenerational knowledge transmission of language, stories, songs, and resource management practices.

Jeremy and his Nuwuvi colleagues will share with us some success stories that came about through American Indian and government agency collaboration and how visitor experiences will be enhanced by interpretation through indigenous eyes.

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Sharon Schafer
“The Art of Nature”

Sharon K. Schafer has a varied background ranging from painter and photographer to wildlife biologist and river guide. As a full-time artist, she combines two loves—nature and art. In an effort promote a deeper understanding and appreciation of the natural world, she has dedicated herself to the creation of beautifully artistic yet scientifically accurate images that appeal to the art collector and the environmental educator alike.

Schafer’s sense of adventure and unflagging curiosity about the natural world have taken her to the ends of the earth. She has worked extensively as an artist, photographer, and videographer in the Arctic, Africa, and the Antarctic. Throughout the world, Schafer shares her artistic talent and passion for the wildlands by teaching art and nature-related classes and lecturing extensively about the stunning beauty and amazing diversity of life on our planet.

Her excellence as a wildlife painter has been recognized by the international Society of Animal Artists as well as the Artists for Conservation. Her paintings have been juried into numerous national competitions and displayed nationwide. Schafer’s current traveling show, “The Art of Nature: Images from the Wildlands of Southern Nevada,” which was developed in collaboration with the Nevada State Museum, will be on exhibit during the NAI National Workshop.

Schafer’s multimedia presentation of photographs, paintings, and field sketches, blended with music will take you on a journey into the wildlands of southern Nevada. She will demonstrate and discuss how the visual arts provide a vital and  effective tool with which to engage visitors and evoke a deeper understanding and emotional appreciation of the beauty and diversity of the natural world.

She is currently working in collaboration with the Wilderness Team of the Southern Nevada Agency Partnership (SNAP)—a unique partnership between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service—to bring this program to the visitors and residents of the southern Nevada in an effort to raise awareness of the region’s wilderness areas. This innovative project, which is funded by the Southern Nevada Lands Management Act, will use the visual arts to encourage the viewer to come away with a different perspective: no longer seeing the public lands of southern Nevada as a desert wasteland, but rather as a place of unparalleled natural beauty and diversity that is deserving of their care and concern.

Volunteer

Are you interested in meeting new people, trying new activities, and supporting your 2010 National Workshop this November? Please consider volunteering for one or many opportunities at this year’s workshop. It’s a great way to get “inside” NAI and see what it takes to put on such a fabulous event. We couldn’t do it without you. There is something for everyone!

Download the form here.

Scholarships offered by NAI Regions and Sections

Some of NAI’s geographical regions and special-interest sections offer scholarships for members to attend the NAI National Workshop. Those opportunities will be posted here as they become available.

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NAI Region 7 Offers Scholarships
Deadline: June 18, 2010

Region 7 scholarships are being offered for the National Workshop in Las Vegas and for the Regional Workshop in August.  Details are available on the Region 7 website.  Deadline for both scholarships is June 18.

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NAI Region 10′s  David Weiss Memorial Scholarship Award
Deadline: July 31, 2010

Created to perpetuate the character, and in memory of, master interpreter David Weiss, this scholarship award will be given each year to one Region 10 member who’s skills emulate Ranger Dave’s in the areas of interpretation, environmental education/outreach, creativity and the ability to live by example. Because of the unique combination of award and scholarship you can nominate a qualified NAI Region 10 member or submit the application for yourself. The award consists of a commemorative plaque for the recipient to keep and the recipient’s name added to a living plaque on display at the Visitors Center of the US Army Corp of Engineers’ Bonneville Lock and Dam, located in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area.

The Scholarship includes $700 for registration, travel, lodging or meals as you see fit to the up coming NAI National Workshop. To apply for the award, please visit the Region 10 scholarships page at www.nairegions.org/10/NIW_Scholarships.htm.

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NCDA Section Offers Grants for National Workshop, Interpreters Road Show
Deadline: August 31, 2010

Members of NAI’s Nature Center Directors and Administrators Section are invited to apply for a $1,000 grant to be used to cover costs to attend the NAI National Workshop in Las Vegas or a grant that covers the cost of the Interpreters Road Show before the National Workshop. This year, the NCDA Section will offer two National Workshop grants and two Interpreters Road Show grants. To apply for one of these grants, download the forms from the NCDA website at www.naisections.org/NCDA.

NAI 2009 Photo Album

IMG_9629Thanks to all of those who attended the 2009 NAI National Workshop in Hartford, Connecticut, November 17-21. Click here to see a photo album. (This is a Facebook album, but you do not need a Facebook account to see it.)

Thanks also to those who shared their photos with NAI: Victor Cuevas, Tom Davies, Faith Duncan, Linda Duvanich, Chris Evans, Kelly Farrell, Jamie Krupka, Shea Lewis, Thomas Meier, Curtis Miller, Jay Miller, John Miller, Eliezer Nieves, Amy Roell, Phil Sexton, Art Shine, and Neil Weintraub.

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