Media Saves the Beach

By

published
April 20, 2025
A photo stands on an orange background, capturing a sunset over the ocean at the beach, with sun rays breaking through the clouds. Below the image, text on a sheet is visible—possibly a description or poem about how media saves such serene scenes for those who cherish them.

Is it safe to go in the water? This question began an exploration of San Diego’s beaches and bays, and of the biological, ecological, political and cultural factors that affect the overall health of local coastal ecosystems.

In biology, students analyzed indicator bacteria levels at six popular coastal locations, as well as the health and diversity of microscopic life in local plankton populations. They used ordinary equipment such as microscopes and more sophisticated equipment on loan from a local non-profit group. Students then trained community members about how citizens could participate in water testing and help preserve coastal ecosystems.

In humanities, students generated original research questions and pursued these as journalists. Some produced short documentaries, editorials, or photo-essays based on their biology research. Others produced large-scale pieces of art with accompanying artist statements. One group published a professional quality 12-month tide calendar, which they sold locally to raise money for further projects. Student projects were critiqued by panels of peers, teachers and local experts before exhibition.

Teacher Reflection

The critical factor was that we started with questions that truly made all of us curious. Scientific results and the ensuing humanities projects required rigorous testing methods and protocols—our research had to be done “right,” and each cycle of tests generated new questions. In this sense, original research involved a self-perpetuating cycle of inquiry and motivation.

—Randy Scherer

Student Reflection

My video explained the dangers of surfing in polluted water. I did a lot of original research to find bacteria levels at different beaches and to learn what kinds of illnesses come from polluted ocean water. I also interviewed a doctor, a local surf shop owner and a member of Coastkeeper, an environmental nonprofit.

—Stephanie Luna, 11th grade

To learn more about this project and others visit the HTH Digital Commons and Brandon Davidson’s & Randy Scherer’s digital portfolios at
https://www.hightechhigh.org/dc/
https://dp.hightechhigh.org/~bdavidson/
https://dp.hightechhigh.org/~rscherer/

TITLE

Media Saves the Beach

written by

Media

published

April 20, 2025

appears in

tags

share this

Media Saves the Beach

By

A photo stands on an orange background, capturing a sunset over the ocean at the beach, with sun rays breaking through the clouds. Below the image, text on a sheet is visible—possibly a description or poem about how media saves such serene scenes for those who cherish them.

Is it safe to go in the water? This question began an exploration of San Diego’s beaches and bays, and of the biological, ecological, political and cultural factors that affect the overall health of local coastal ecosystems.

In biology, students analyzed indicator bacteria levels at six popular coastal locations, as well as the health and diversity of microscopic life in local plankton populations. They used ordinary equipment such as microscopes and more sophisticated equipment on loan from a local non-profit group. Students then trained community members about how citizens could participate in water testing and help preserve coastal ecosystems.

In humanities, students generated original research questions and pursued these as journalists. Some produced short documentaries, editorials, or photo-essays based on their biology research. Others produced large-scale pieces of art with accompanying artist statements. One group published a professional quality 12-month tide calendar, which they sold locally to raise money for further projects. Student projects were critiqued by panels of peers, teachers and local experts before exhibition.

Teacher Reflection

The critical factor was that we started with questions that truly made all of us curious. Scientific results and the ensuing humanities projects required rigorous testing methods and protocols—our research had to be done “right,” and each cycle of tests generated new questions. In this sense, original research involved a self-perpetuating cycle of inquiry and motivation.

—Randy Scherer

Student Reflection

My video explained the dangers of surfing in polluted water. I did a lot of original research to find bacteria levels at different beaches and to learn what kinds of illnesses come from polluted ocean water. I also interviewed a doctor, a local surf shop owner and a member of Coastkeeper, an environmental nonprofit.

—Stephanie Luna, 11th grade

To learn more about this project and others visit the HTH Digital Commons and Brandon Davidson’s & Randy Scherer’s digital portfolios at
https://www.hightechhigh.org/dc/
https://dp.hightechhigh.org/~bdavidson/
https://dp.hightechhigh.org/~rscherer/

A woman with curly hair holds a yellow and red flag, smiling. Text reads: Center for Love & Justice. Join our Open Call 2025 for Partnerships in the Face of Injustice! A Get Started button sits below, inviting action. The border and accents blend vibrant orange and green tones.

More Project Cards

Skip to content