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Region 7 Update May 23rd, 2026
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Join us June 2nd to hear how 3 public libraries are supporting homeschool students with Citizen Science Kits!

Posted by on May 22nd, 2026 Posted in: Blog, Data, Funded Project
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On June 2, 2026, we will be hosting three public libraries who received Citizen Science Kits from NNLM Region 7 to discuss how their libraries have supported science education and programming with a focus on homeschoolers. Between October 1, 2024 – April 1, 2025, Region 7 provided 45 citizen science kits to NNLM members in our region. This award was designed to support programmatic outreach in under-resourced communities with themed kits that address Exploring Biodiversity, Observing Pollinators, or Monitoring Air Quality.

How Liberty Library is using the Monitoring Air Quality Kit

What is Citizen Science?

Citizen Science projects are an innovative way to connect individuals and communities to projects that could benefit from robust data collection. Through community science, people can be engaged in programs that can directly improve their community’s health outcomes. Citizen science efforts allow communities to engage with science as well as contribute to a broad project that looks at environmental health factors in their community.

Why Citizen Science Kits?

The purpose of the award was to support citizen science initiatives that raise awareness of the environmental determinants of health and participatory science in their community. Specifically, the Citizen Science Award sought to address the following aim from the NNLM Region 7 cooperative agreement to Advance health equity through national and regional partnerships and initiatives to ensure a variety of members and the public will have equal access to biomedical, health, and public health information and data.

The Panel

Our panelists are Cindy Jewett from James A. Tuttle Library in Antrim, New Hampshire, Barbara Rehmeyer from Liberty Library in Liberty, Maine, and Nicole Gauvreau from Maxfield Public Library in Loudon, New Hampshire. Each of these libraries discussed their work with homeschooling families in their applications so Region 7 invited them to give a panel presentation about how they are using the kits to support science education and programming with a focus on homeschoolers.

Photo of science fair project, Tracks, Trails, and Tails. Project includes photos of trails and guides for nature identification.

Exploring Biodiversity Kit used to develop this project for homeschool science fair at Maxfield Public Library

Want to hear more?

Join us for real world examples of creative programming, the nuts and bolts of incorporating citizen science kits into the collection, and ideas for creating your own kits. Region 7 Presents: Citizen Science at the Library for Homeschool Students | NNLM

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NNLM Region 7
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School
55 Lake Avenue North
Worcester, MA 01655
(508) 856-5985

This has been funded in whole or in part with Federal funds from the Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, under cooperative agreement number UG4LM012347 with the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School.

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