See links below for a free webinar (Today at 1pm) on the 8/21/17 solar eclipse, as well as a neat opportunity to register your library for the
2017 Solar Eclipse event & receive free solar viewing glasses!
Cathy Lancaster
Youth Services Coordinator
Statewide Library Services
Library of Michigan
517-335-8129
517-373-5700 f
Help us acknowledge and celebrate the great work of Michigan educators! Go to:
www.michigan.gov/proudMIeducator
today.
From: Keliann LaConte [mailto:klaconte@SPACESCIENCE.ORG]
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2016 11:25 AM
Subject: [BULK- Could Be SPAM] FREE STAR_Net Webinar tomorrow: Is Your Library Ready for the 2017 Solar Eclipse?
This is a friendly reminder about a free webinar tomorrow. Get a jump start on planning for what is sure to be a major media event: the solar eclipse on August 21, 2017! This
celestial event is already attracting international attention.
Registration is not required. Please join at 11 am MT/1 pm ET tomorrow by clicking
https://eclipse-event.webex.com/eclipse-event/onstage/g.php?MTID=e3570f844d0c6d7ae2090eb594f74f11c. Further details and links to resources are below – I highly recommend making a “Sun cookie” to prepare for the webinar!
Keliann
««««« »»»»»
Keliann LaConte
Professional Development Manager
National Center for Interactive Learning
Space Science Institute
Boulder, Colorado
720-974-5835
Inspire – Explore – Discover
STAR_Net Webinar: Is Your Library Ready for the Astronomical Event of the Decade?
Wednesday, October 19, 2016 at 11am MT
On August 21, 2017, we will be treated to the first total eclipse of the Sun visible in the continental U.S. in almost 40 years. The spectacular total eclipse will only be
visible in a narrow band about 60 miles across, stretching diagonally across the country from a beach in Oregon to a beach in South Carolina. However, everyone in North America will see a partial solar eclipse, where a big “bite” will be taken out of the Sun.
This will be the first major U.S. eclipse of the Internet age, and most people will need clear reliable information on when and how to observe the eclipse of the Sun safely.
Astronomers are hoping libraries will play a key role in getting this information out to their communities. Working with astronomy groups in their communities, they could also be a central place for safe observing.
Get an early start in preparing for this eclipse, how to explain it, how to observe it safely, and what role libraries can play in organizing and informing their communities.
Library staff and their partners are invited to join a STAR_Net webinar on Wednesday, October 19, 2016 at 11am MT, where you’ll get great information about the eclipse and
be able to ask questions about the role your library can play. Hosts: Dennis Schatz (NSTA, Pacific Science Center), and Andrew Fraknoi (Foothill College; co-author of a new book on eclipse education). Click
here for an Eclipse FAQ sheet and
click here for hands-on Sun science activities.
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The STAR Library Education Network (STAR_Net) is a hands-on learning program for libraries and their communities across the country. STAR_Net focuses on building
STEM skills through developing “science-technology activities and resources” (STAR). Find hands-on activities and other resources for starting or building your STEM programs at www.starnetlibraries.org.
Register your public library for a 2017 solar eclipse event and
receive 50 FREE* solar viewing glasses and more!
*First-come, first served
Hands-on Sun Science
There's more to the Sun than meets the eye -- so use your taste buds! Make a
Sun Cookie by decorating a frosted sugar cookie to model the (tasty) parts of the Sun:
Sugar sprinkles: gas rising up from the Sun's core make Texas-sized features on the Sun called solar granules.
Chocolate pieces: cooler areas of the Sun appear as darker
sun spots. Sun spots come in pairs, so add the chocolate pieces two at a time!
Licorice strands: hot gas erupts from the Sun in looping arcs called
solar prominences.
Whatever you do, don't add the
corona -- it will melt your Sun Cookie! Mysteriously, the corona is much hotter than the surface of the Sun. It is relatively dim and only visible when the Sun's light is blocked out -- such as during a total solar eclipse.
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