Citizen Science in the Classroom
Citizen science is a rewardingly inclusive way to provide meaningful, hands-on, minds-on research experiences for students. One such program is Globe at Night, an international campaign to raise public awareness of the impact of light pollution by having people measure night-sky brightness and submit observations from a computer or smartphone. In a Sunday-afternoon workshop put on by Connie Walker (National Optical Astronomy Observatory), Doug Welch (McMaster University), and Kelly Beatty (Dexter-Southfield Schools), high-school teachers and college instructors learned about tools and techniques for getting their classes involved in Globe at Night.
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Citizen science is a rewardingly inclusive way to provide meaningful, hands-on, minds-on research experiences for students. One such program is Globe at Night, an international campaign to raise public awareness of the impact of light pollution by having people measure night-sky brightness and submit observations from a computer or smartphone. In a Sunday-afternoon workshop, Doug Welch (McMaster University) showed high-school teachers and college instructors how to use a Dark Sky Meter to make precise measurements of night-sky brightness. AAS photo © 2014 Joson Images.