Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- Public Education: the ultimatum for the profession
- The Role of Science Centres as Aids for Astronomical Education
- The STAR CENTRE at Sheffield Gallam University
- How to Succeed in convincing Municipalities to build Astronomy Centres: the experience of Campinas Region
- Public Information Project of the Total Solar Eclipse of November 3, 1994 in Paraná State, Brazil
- Solar Eclipses and Public Education
- The Role of Amateur Astronomers in Astronomy Education
- Astronomy to Understand a Human Environment
- Selling our Southern Skies: recent public astronomy developments at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- Astronomy Education in Latvia – problems and development
- Teaching Astronomy at Sydney Observatory
- Developing Science Education and Outreach Partnerships at Research Institutions
- Literature for Amateur Astronomers
- Desktop Space Exploration
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Developing Science Education and Outreach Partnerships at Research Institutions
from 5 - Public Education in Astronomy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- Public Education: the ultimatum for the profession
- The Role of Science Centres as Aids for Astronomical Education
- The STAR CENTRE at Sheffield Gallam University
- How to Succeed in convincing Municipalities to build Astronomy Centres: the experience of Campinas Region
- Public Information Project of the Total Solar Eclipse of November 3, 1994 in Paraná State, Brazil
- Solar Eclipses and Public Education
- The Role of Amateur Astronomers in Astronomy Education
- Astronomy to Understand a Human Environment
- Selling our Southern Skies: recent public astronomy developments at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- Astronomy Education in Latvia – problems and development
- Teaching Astronomy at Sydney Observatory
- Developing Science Education and Outreach Partnerships at Research Institutions
- Literature for Amateur Astronomers
- Desktop Space Exploration
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Summary
Introduction
Like many research institutions, the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysicsf (CfA), has been actively engaged in education and public outreach activities for many years. The Harvard University Department of Astronomy, the formal higher education arm of the CfA, offers an undergraduate concentration and a doctoral program. In our Science Education Department, educational researchers manage ten programs that address the needs of teachers and students (K–12 and college), through advanced technology, teacher enhancement programs, and the development of curriculum materials. The Editorial and Public Affairs Department offers several public lecture series, recorded sky information, children's nights, and runs the Whipple Observatory Visitors Center in Amado, AZ. In this environment of successful programs, the High Energy Astrophysics (HEA) division, one of seven research divisions at the CfA, has initiated, or partnered with other institutions, development of several new education and outreach programs. Some of these programs involve partnerships with the education community, but all of them have been initiated by and involve scientists.
Astronomical research in the HEA division is mainly focused on x-ray astronomy and the development of advanced x-ray instrumentation. Historically, involvement in education and outreach programs, including presenting public talks, school talks, the development of slides sets, and the publication of popular articles, has been informal. With management support, however, this long-lived tradition of informal education and outreach recently has coalesced into several formal programs that target three specific groups: college students, K–12 students and teachers, and the general public.
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- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching , pp. 230 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998