Take Your Classroom Into Space
Paris, France (ESA) Jun 25, 2009 A Europe-wide education event will link the International Space Station with hundreds of schoolchildren in several European cities. In a live link-up with the ISS, scheduled for 21 September, ESA astronaut Frank De Winne will perform a simple experiment in space to demonstrate the effects of freefall. The event is enabled by ESA's Directorate of Human Spaceflight and its Erasmus Centre and will be co-hosted by four European science museums. The 'Take your classroom into space' activity is one of several education activities planned during De Winne's ongoing six-month OasISS mission on the International Space Station (ISS).
Demonstrations One of the two best experiment ideas, which were proposed independently by five teachers, 'Do objects have weight in space?' and 'Exploring Capillarity' will be demonstrated by De Winne during the live link-up. Using the 'Take your classroom into space' Education Kit, which contains all the elements needed to perform the same demonstrations on the ground, secondary school students (14 to 18 years old) will compare their results with those obtained by De Winne in space, helping them to learn about the conditions of freefall. During the live link-up with the Station, De Winne will also answer questions from the students.
Four European venues The locations and venues of the 'Take your classroom into space' event are: + CosmoCaixa, Barcelona, Spain + NOESIS, Thessaloniki, Greece + Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia, Milan, Italy + Technopolis, Mechelen, Belgium Each venue will host some 200 secondary school students, their teachers and local authority representatives. The four sites will be interconnected for the duration of a three-hour programme that will feature videos, hands-on activities, a space-show, a lecture from a space expert, a game and the live call with De Winne. Schools not able to attend the event at one of the venues can still perform the 'Take your classroom into space' activity remotely. The call with De Winne will be made available on the ESA website a few hours after the event. An edited highlights video will be made available later on.
Ordering the Education Kit The Education Kit comes with a teaching guide written by European teachers and translated to Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian and Spanish. The guide provides step-by-step instructions to help perform the demonstrations, exercises and questions, as well as an introduction to ESA, the ISS, and the freefall environment. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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