Ocean Institute
The Ocean Institute is an ocean education organization located in Dana Point, California. Founded as the Marine Institute in 1977, it offers ocean science and maritime history programs for K-12 students and their teachers. Over 100,000 students and 8,000 teachers from Orange County and the surrounding counties participate yearly in immersion-style programs in the Institute's oceanfront labs and abroad.[1]
The Institute is open to the general public on weekdays, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., and weekends, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.; visitors can see marine animals and ocean-themed exhibits.
Moored at the Institute is its 70-foot marine science research vessel, the R/V Sea Explorer, used for student programs and to take visitors on trips to see marine wildlife, including whale watching. The Institute also partners with the Lazy-W Ranch, a camp located in the Cleveland National Forest where students study the ecosystem and California history. It provides outreach programs via a mobile laboratory provided by the "Ocean in Motion" van and distance learning via video conference.[2]
The Ocean Institute is also the birthplace of Spongebob Squarepants. The creator of cartoon, Stephen Hillenburg worked as a marine biologist for many years in the 1990s and gave tours to visitors. During his spare time there, he began to draw early doodles that would one day come to be Spongebob Squarepants. Hillenburg got his inspiration from the varieties of marine species that he was studying, such as sponges, plankton, squids, starfish, and crabs. His original idea was to make a comic book, but after trying to get it published, none of the companies wanted to go forward. Soon after, Hillenburg attended an animation festival, hoping to get signed. It was at this festival that Hillenburg met Joe Murray, the creator of Nickelodeon's Rocko's Modern Life. Murrary admired his work, and offered him a job at the Nickelodeon Animation Studio in Burbank, California. Hillenburg took the offer and left the Ocean Institute to pursue his dream and an animator, taking what he learned here with him into the creation of the first episode of Spongebob Squarepants which aired in 1999.
Other Facilities
- Ecology Learning Center - for grades K-3, includes marine life tanks, wet-tables with video-microscopes, a digital imaging lab and an interactive children's theater.
- Marine Life Refuge - Eight acres of beach and tidepools just to the north of the facility; used for walking tours.
- Maritime Center - Used for teaching maritime history.
- Packard At-Sea Learning Center - For grades 4-6, houses marine life including jellyfish at various stages of development.
- Surfscience Learning Center, Sleeping Deck - Houses teaching exhibits such as an oceanography test tank, wave tank, shark & ray pool and a shipboard research station. Students on overnight programs can sleep upstairs on the sleeping deck. The deck also houses a National Weather Service Coastal Observation Station.
- Samueli Lecture Hall and Conference Center - The central meeting facility of the Institute, used for educational presentations and special events.
- Student and Teacher Services Building - The main administration building; a two-story open lobby serves as the main entry for visitors. Exhibits on the first floor.
- Center for Cooperation in Research and Education - Integrates ocean research into Ocean Institute programs.
- Laurena G. Chambers Gallery and Gift Store - Open daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., staffed by volunteers. Offers educational materials and ocean and maritime-themed gift items.
Tall Ships: Pilgrim and Spirit of Dana Point
The Institute maintains two tall ships, the Pilgrim, a 130-foot vessel used in overnight and dockside programs, and the Spirit of Dana Point, a 118-foot topsail schooner. The Pilgrim is a replica of the tall ship that Richard Henry Dana, Jr. sailed onboard into Dana Point in the 1830s. Tall ship programs simulate the experience of a sailor in the 1830s.[3]
The Pilgrim and Spirit of Dana Point are showcased at the Institute's largest annual event, the Toshiba Tall Ships Festival,[4] held in September. It draws seven or eight tall ships from up and down the coast, and features pirates, singing, cannon battles and a chance to sail on a tall ship.
Annual budget
The Ocean Institute has an annual budget of $6 million, and employs 100 full and part-time staff members, as well utilizing the services of hundreds of volunteers. Professional partners include JPL, the National Science Foundation and Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Supporters include the Swenson Family Foundation, the Henry Samueli Foundation, Quiksilver and KOCE, among others. Dan Stetson, who joined the Institute staff in 1992, serves as the Institute’s president. It is funded through school visitations, state and city grants, as well as gifts from local philanthropists. The watershed education program is funded by Miocean and the Surf Industry Manufacturers Association.[1][5]
The Institute's largest annual fundraiser is its Laguna Beach Million Dollar Home Raffle,[6] which began in 2005.
References
- 1 2 Luna, Claire (October 14, 2003). "Dana Point's Ocean Institute shows schoolkids how inland acts of carelessness can harm the ocean.". Los Angeles Times. pp. B3. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
- ↑ "About Us". Orange County Ocean Institute. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
- ↑ http://www.ocregister.com/articles/institute-21827-ocean-dana.html
- ↑ "Tall Ships Festival site".
- ↑ Reyes, David (September 28, 2000). "Dana Point Ocean Institute Receives $9.5-Million Gift". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ www.lagunabeachhomeraffle.com "Laguna Beach Million Dollar Home Raffle site" Check
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External links
Coordinates: 33°27′40″N 117°42′24″W / 33.4611°N 117.7066°W