叠测:听Tiffany Whitfield
Alumnus Lieutenant Commander John Kidd serves as Executive Officer on the National Ocean Atmospheric Association Corps (NOAA Corps) Pisces ship. In 2010, he earned a Bachelor of Sciences degree from 51情报站鈥檚 Department of Ocean & Earth Sciences. LCDR Kidd鈥檚 life changed after he toured a and recently, he paid it forward by inviting some OES 51情报站 students onto the ship where he is second in command.
鈥淎s a senior undergraduate student, I was afforded the opportunity to tour the , an opportunity聽made possible by the collaboration between Rear Admiral Shepard Smith,聽NOAA, Ret. and Professor聽Fred Dobbs,鈥 said LCDR Kidd. During the tour, the Commanding Officer talked with the students and shared in 鈥済reat detail鈥 a hydrographic dataset and explained what it took to execute the mission. The National Hydrography Dataset represents the water drainage network throughout the United States which includes features such as rivers, streams, canals, lakes, ponds, coastline, dams, and stream gages. The complex connectedness of bodies of water and how they impact the environment appealed to LCDR Kidd. 鈥淚t was at that moment I knew I wanted to become a聽NOAA聽Corps officer and to one day sail as a Commanding Officer of a hydrographic vessel,鈥 said LCDR Kidd. 鈥淏ecause this one-hour tour forever changed my life, I wanted to afford the students currently enrolled in OES classes at 51情报站 the same opportunity.鈥
During the two hour visit to聽NOAA's Marine Operations Center - Atlantic facilities, 51情报站 OES students boarded the聽聽and聽NOAA聽Ship Thomas Jefferson.聽 Broken up into two groups, they ventured around these two ships and saw various spaces like the Mess Deck where meals are served, the Wet Lab where the bulk of the science occurs聽and fish are dissected, the Acoustics Lab where the ship's sonar equipment is operated, and the Bridge where the Commissioned Officers safely navigate the vessel.聽
Current OES student Victor Akudoro enjoyed this unique opportunity. 鈥淚t was a nice and educative experience to be at the聽NOAA聽facility in Downtown Norfolk, and to tour the NOAA Pisces ship which carries out fish study research and the Thomas Jefferson ship which engages in physical oceanography and modeling analysis. The crew on both ships, were very welcoming and they gave us a detailed explanation of how the ship works and their day-to-day activities,鈥 said Akudoro.
Seeing a research vessel of that magnitude is eye-opening, but the hopes of working on one took patience and determination for LCDR Kidd. 鈥淚've always聽had a deep respect聽for the scientific method, and I was naturally drawn to the challenge聽of developing the critical thinking skills needed to be an effective scientist,鈥 said LCDR Kidd.聽鈥淚 also grew up on the water and knew that I wanted to make a living working on聽boats/ships conducting science.鈥
His journey聽from 51情报站 to the聽NOAA聽Corps involved聽LCDR Kidd taking a paid internship with Earth Resources Technology as a physical scientist.聽 鈥淚 first worked at the聽Atlantic Hydrographic Branch in Norfolk, VA for about聽six months compiling hydrographic data from聽NOAA ships and contract survey聽companies,鈥 said LCDR Kidd. He took part in critical components in the workflow to update the nation's nautical charts for the safety of navigation.聽鈥淚 then sailed with the聽NOAA聽Ship Thomas Jefferson for another聽six months collecting hydrographic data using the ship's hull mounted multibeam echosounder, side scan sonar, and her 28-foot aluminum hydrographic launch equipped聽with the same survey instrumentation,鈥 said LCDR Kidd. Following this internship, he became much closer to achieving his dream because he was accepted into the聽NOAA聽Corps and reported to Basic Officer Training in June of 2011.
He has served in NOAA Corps for 12 years with at least 8 more years to go. NOAA Corps is not the military and are not combat trained, but it is a聽uniformed branch of service, similar to the United States Public Health Services.
He credits his time as an undergraduate OES student. 鈥淢y time spent at 51情报站 equipped聽me with the baseline knowledge required to be a successful operator of聽NOAA鈥檚 scientific platforms (ships, small boats, aircraft, and autonomous systems),鈥 said LCDR Kidd.聽The OES聽program helped build his STEM skills needed to become a commissioned officer in the聽NOAA聽Corps.聽
鈥51情报站 is special due to its strong scientific programs and its proximity to a plethora of scientific opportunities聽being adjacent to the Chesapeake聽Bay and聽NOAA operational聽units,鈥 said LCDR Kidd.
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