Her Photography Immerses Students in Underwater Education - Jess Newley


Women Mind in Water: Artivist Series Her Photography Immerses Students in Underwater Education - Jess Newley

About Jess Newley

Jess Newley is an environmental educator with a Master’s from Western Washington University. She has a passion for underwater photography and videography and is using her talents and a 360 camera to create a virtual reality education program in order to immerse students in the underwater world of the nearshore waters around the San Juan Islands of Washington.

Virtual Reality Ocean Education in the San Juan Islands

Jess Newley discusses how her work with Friends of the San Juans, a nonprofit in Washington State, inspired her to develop a virtual reality school program that brings students underwater. Using a 360 video camera, Jess helps students experience the nearshore waters of the San Juan Islands and better understand the marine ecosystems of the Salish Sea.

As the Marine Science Coordinator for Friends of the San Juans, Jess spends her days doing hands-on field science and community education. Her work includes forage fish beach surveys, boater education to protect eelgrass beds around the islands, and advocacy for the health of the Salish Sea, including forage fish, salmon, and orcas.

On the Women Mind the Water Artivist Series podcast, Jess also shares the story of how she came to this work and how underwater photography and videography became part of her ocean education practice. Through virtual reality, field science, and visual storytelling, Jess Newley helps students connect with the underwater world and understand why protecting local marine habitats matters.

Pam Ferris-Olson

Pam Ferris-Olson has a Ph.D. in Leadership and Change from Antioch University and master’s degrees in Biology and Natural Resource Science. She has studied ocean creatures, worked in communications, and now focuses on the relationship between women, water, and communication.

Pam has worked as an educator, writer, photographer, videographer, artist, and podcaster.  Her work has appeared on TV, in newspapers and magazines, and on a host of online sites. .Her non-fiction book, Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories, featured three contemporary women as they struggle to live graceful lives weighed down by generational trauma and systemic racism. Both her dissertation and her book demonstrate that even though our personal journeys differ, they still resonate with us. These stories connect and lift us.

Pam’s work now focuses on the ocean. She is an ecological artist creating quirky images of marine animals and installations aimed at engaging, informing, and stimulating dialog. She is a podcaster and hosts the Women Mind the Water Artivist Series which explores the connection between the work of artivists and their impact in influencing change.

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Go Forth and Science, Comics that Make Marine Science Fun - Kate Hruby

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Plaster Art Inspired by Maine Marshes and Beaches – Liz Ames