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
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Current Trends in European Astronomy Education
- Project ASTRO: a successful model for astronomer/teacher partnerships
- The Training of Teachers
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching
- Coping with a New Curriculum: the evolving schools program at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- US Science Education Reforms: is astronomy being overlooked?
- “Plaza del Cielo” Complex: its state of evolution
- Astronomy as a School Subject
- Teaching Astronomy at Secondary School Level in Europe
- A High School Course for a wide Range of Student Abilities
- Measuring the Eccentricity of the Terrestrial Orbit: an experiment in the classroom
- A Program incorporating Physics, Astronomy and Environment
- Classroom Activity: Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
- Collaboration as a Viable Approach for Making Astrophysics Research accessible to the K-12 Community through the Internet and the World Wide Web
- Astronomy Teaching in the Astronautics Club
- The TRUMP Astrophysics Project: Resources for Physics Teaching
- The Life in the Universe Series
- The Astronomy Village: investigating the Universe
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
The Life in the Universe Series
from 6 - Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
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
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Current Trends in European Astronomy Education
- Project ASTRO: a successful model for astronomer/teacher partnerships
- The Training of Teachers
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching
- Coping with a New Curriculum: the evolving schools program at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- US Science Education Reforms: is astronomy being overlooked?
- “Plaza del Cielo” Complex: its state of evolution
- Astronomy as a School Subject
- Teaching Astronomy at Secondary School Level in Europe
- A High School Course for a wide Range of Student Abilities
- Measuring the Eccentricity of the Terrestrial Orbit: an experiment in the classroom
- A Program incorporating Physics, Astronomy and Environment
- Classroom Activity: Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
- Collaboration as a Viable Approach for Making Astrophysics Research accessible to the K-12 Community through the Internet and the World Wide Web
- Astronomy Teaching in the Astronautics Club
- The TRUMP Astrophysics Project: Resources for Physics Teaching
- The Life in the Universe Series
- The Astronomy Village: investigating the Universe
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Summary
Students, young and old, find the existence of extraterrestrial life one of the most intriguing of all science topics. The theme of searching for life in the universe lends itself naturally to the integration of many scientific disciplines for thematic science education. Based upon the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), the Life in the Universe (LITU) curriculum project at the SETI Institute developed a series of six teachers guides, with ancillary materials, for use in elementary and middle school classrooms, grades 3 through 9. Lessons address topics such as the formation of planetary systems, the origin and nature of life, the rise of intelligence and culture, spectroscopy, scales of distance and size, communication and the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Each guide is structured to present a challenge as the students work through the lessons. The six LITU teachers guides may be used individually or as a multi-grade curriculum for a school.
Integral to the development process was the collection of evaluation data on draft materials from field test teachers, students, and scientists. These data led to revisions and further field tests. Responses indicate that the objectives for the materials were achieved, and that the materials were well received. The LITU project was conducted by the SETI Institute in Mountain View, CA; the project was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The LITU Series is being published by Teachers Ideas Press, a division of Libraries Unlimited, Englewood, Colorado, USA.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching , pp. 326 - 331Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998