Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Accessibility Educators met to Discuss Skynet Junior Scholars Implementation at Lions Camp 2015


     Educators from the blind and visually impaired and deaf and hard of hearing communities met with Yerkes Observatory staff to discuss the further implementation of Skynet Junior Scholars. The two-part meeting took place at Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, on November 13-14, 2014. Lions Camp facilitators, website developers, grant researchers and evaluators were also present at the meeting.
     The 2-day meeting began with an overview of Skynet Junior Scholars, a web portal giving students in middle and high school online access to robotic telescopes located worldwide. Special focus was on getting blind and visually impaired and deaf and hard of hearing students involved and ensuring equal access to the Skynet Junior Scholars website for such groups.


     Skynet Junior Scholars will be presented at Lions Camp in Rosholt, Wisconsin, during the weeks for the blind and visually impaired children on August 2-7, 2015, and deaf and hard of hearing children on July 5-10, 2015. Twenty students from each session will be studied to determine the success and impact of Skynet Junior Scholars. The Public Education Specialist from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, West Virginia, will interview the 20 students in the study to determine how accessible Skynet Junior Scholars was to them, and how they plan to use the software after camp is over, as well as how the knowledge gained from Skynet Junior Scholars will affect their potential career choices in the future.
     Day two of the meeting consisted of Skynet Junior Scholars website testing to provide screen-reading software accessibility feedback to one of the web developers working on the project from the Center for Elementary Mathematics and Science Education at the University of Chicago. A gallery of images prepared for tactilization will also be created and put up on the site, so blind students can benefit from those who have worked with the software before them, as long as they have access to a SwellForm Tactile Graphics Machine and a laser printer in order to convert the image from a PDF file to a tactile image they can touch.
     Teachers in the deaf and hard of hearing community met to discuss creating closed captioning for the video tutorials of the Skynet Junior Scholars website. Another challenge the deaf and hard of hearing team will tackle is the language in American Sign Language, which currently does not facilitate the scientific terms necessary to discuss telescopes, celestial objects and other components of astronomy. Part of the deaf and hard of hearing team’s approach will be working to develop such language, along with the students who will participate.
     Previous testing experience shows this kind of programming has a very positive impact on the outlooks of the students as far as career and educational goals are concerned. Many students say they would never have considered careers in math or science if the subjects had not been presented to them in an accessible format. After participating in Skynet Junior Scholars, however, they say they feel the fields of math and science are more open to them. The staff at Yerkes Observatory say they are excited to bring these opportunities to the students, and to encourage them to reach for the stars.
     Learn more about Skynet Junior Scholars, as well as how you can be trained to bring these empowering and exciting opportunities to students by becoming a Skynet Junior Scholars Workshop Leader. Training is offered online in January and at Yerkes Observatory in March 2015. Go to skynetjuniorscholars.org for more information.


Friday, March 21, 2014

Carina Nebula Texture -Candy Activity

Have you ever wanted to make a nebula out of candy? Here's how:

Purpose: This activity illustrates that The Carina Nebula is a three-dimensional object in space. Since students are using materials that are familiar to them to make the nebula, they will be more likely to remember what each item represents. The activity is multi-sensory, so students will also be more engaged.

Materials

Tactile version of the Carina Nebula
Text – A Guided Tour of the Carina Nebula –(large print version, Braille version, online audio as needed)
Large black construction paper
Zip-Lok bags

Candy Needed

Cotton Candy – Main Nebula Materials
Pixie Sticks sprinkled – Bright Gasses
Mike & Ikes – Stars
2 Peach Rings (twisted together to form figure-eight) – Eta Carinae
Gummy worms – dust pillars
Malted Milk Balls – partial bubbles—when bitten in half--& complete bubbles—when left whole
twizzlers – Jets from starbirth
dots/gummy poppers – bright globules
raisenettes – dark globules
hot chocolate sprinkled – dusty areas




Procedure

1.   Familiarize participants with Tactile version of the Carina Nebula and the Legend (2-5 min)
2.   Read through A Guided Tour of the Carina Nebula as participants follow along, feeling the symbols that represent various parts of the nebula (20-30 min)
3.   Walk participants through making their own nebula using candies to represent elements [Use construction paper as place-mat] (10-20 min)
4.   Ask participants to explain the elements of their nebula (10-20 min)
5.   Pour nebulae into Zip-Lok bags for participants to take home.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Solar System in Your Pocket


Purpose: To demonstrate the distances between the planets in our solar system.

Materials
For each model:
• 1 meter length of cash register tape
• 10 round stickers: five large and five small (Use textured stickers if you are doing this activity for people who are blind or visually impaired.)
• pencil or marker (If possible, make Braille labels with sticky tape, using short-hand for names of planets.)

Procedure: First, guess where you think the planets are in relation to each other on the tape, marking the spaces with pencil. Then, flip the tape over and follow the steps below.

1. Place a sticker on each end of the tape, one large and one small, right at the edge. Label the large one Sun and the small one Pluto.
2. Fold the tape in half, crease it, unfold and lay flat. Place a large sticker at the half-way
point. Label the sticker Uranus.
3. Fold the tape back in half, then in half again. Unfold and lay flat. Place large stickers at the quarter mark and 3/4 marks and
label as Saturn (closer to the Sun) and Neptune (closer to Pluto).
4. Fold back into quarters, then in half one more time. This will give you eighths. Unfold
and lay flat again. Place a large sticker for Jupiter at the 1/8 mark (between the Sun and
Saturn), and label.
5. There is no need to fold the whole thing up again, because the 4 gas giants and Pluto are all on the tape already. For the remaining terrestrial planets, you’ll only need 1/2 of the first 1/8th! That’s the inner 1/16th of your meter. Fold the Sun out to meet Jupiter to mark the 1/16th spot. A planet does not go here, but the Asteroid Belt does.
6. Fold the remaining 1/16th in half and crease at the 1/32nd spot. Place a small
sticker for the Earth just inside this fold (between the Sun and Asteroid Belt) and a small
sticker for Mars just outside the fold (closer to the Asteroid Belt) and label them.
7. Place small stickers for Mercury and Venus, between the Earth and Sun, dividing the space into 1/3rds and label them as Mercury closest to the Sun and Venus
closest to the Earth.


Here are some thoughts from an Astronomy Club leader about the effects of this project:

2014-02-26
"After last week and the demonstration of a pocket solar system, I had my astronomy club members make one. Their placement of the planets was,for a couple of the younger students, way off from the correct location. None of them had all planets located correctly, though they were in the right order. The folding and placement of the planets went well, and the discussion of the large spaces between planets was questioned( my students do that a lot). So, they then researched distances to the planets and decided that maybe the tape placement was correct. They used their chromebooks-an awesome way to get kids to research in the classroom(gives them confidence to investigate on their own). They did division problems using the distance to each planet divided by distance to Earth(their decision) to see if it was 'twice' as far, or how many times as far-so spaced like the tape. I listened and learned as they decided themselves that the tape was pretty accurate. They were surprised that the first four planets were as close as the tape and divisions showed.--cool!"
--Kathleen Roper
Hoyleton Astronomy Club
Hoyleton Public School Dist 29
Hoyleton IL, 

Friday, March 7, 2014

Family Nights at Yerkes Observatory are a Great way to Learn About Astronomy, say Participants

     Each month, the staff and scientists at Yerkes Observatory host a night of activities based on a theme, geared toward students in grades three through eight and their families. Past themes have ranged from Arduino’s, to snap circuits, to comets.
     Some of the activities completed during the night about comets on January 16 included making a “Comet on a Stick,” which is a three-dimensional model of a comet using Play-Doh, tongue depressors and other materials, as well as demonstrating how the tails of a comet move in relation to the Sun by using a hair dryer to represent the Sun. One of the participants moved the Play-Doh model of the comet around the hair dryer, and the parts of the “comet” representing the tails moved in correspondence with the way the hair dryer was blowing. Students also heard a lecture about comets, asteroids and their orbits given by Dr. Richard Kron, a professor at the University of Chicago’s Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics. (Kron was the director of Yerkes Observatory from 1989-1991.)
     Participants say the themes and activities presented at the Yerkes Observatory Family Nights encourage them to study astronomy at home.
     “I think we liked the Snap Circuits the best,” said fourth-grader Connor Pecht.
     “I agree,” Connor’s father, Herb Pecht, said. ”We liked them so much we got a large set for Christmas.”
     Chuck and Sue Ruehle are both amateur astronomers who teach astronomy in Tanzania, as well as to their five grandchildren. “We learn new things,” Sue said. “[Family Nights give us] new things to take with us when we go teach. It’s a great resource.”
     Later in 2014, Yerkes Observatory will unveil the Skynet Junior Scholars program, which is a program enabling middle- and high-school students to request images from telescopes all over the world using an online telescope network called Skynet. Family Night coordinator Brittnay Strubel said parents seemed excited about the idea when they were told about it at the January 16th event.
     “They were all actually pretty excited to eventually do the program,” Strubel said. “Some of the parents did ask more about it, like, ‘What exactly is Skynet?’ and where the different telescopes are located. They all seemed really interested in it.”
     The next Family Night takes place March 11, and the topic will be SOFIA, which stands for the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy. This is a modified 747 jet, with a 100-inch telescope built into the back of it. One of the cameras on SOFIA was constructed at Yerkes Observatory.
Visit the Yerkes Observatory homepage at http://astro.uchicago.edu/yerkes/ to sign up for Family Night programs.