Stellarium/About: Difference between revisions

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You can read the suggested Activity online [[Stellarium/activity]] as well as the [http://digitaliseducation.com/curricula.html full sets of lessons].
You can read the suggested Activity online [[Stellarium/activity]] as well as the [http://digitaliseducation.com/curricula.html full sets of lessons].
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It is worth noting that these lesson plans are designed for a portable planetarium rather than the projection of Stallarium on a classroom wall (which is not quite the same) - it may seem a bit odd if you were not tuned into that fact.
It is worth noting that these lesson plans are designed for a portable planetarium rather than the projection of Stallarium on a classroom wall (which is not quite the same) - it may seem a bit odd if you were not tuned into that fact.



Revision as of 16:03, 14 November 2012

Stars in the sky: what's up?

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You can read the suggested Activity online Stellarium/activity as well as the full sets of lessons.

It is worth noting that these lesson plans are designed for a portable planetarium rather than the projection of Stallarium on a classroom wall (which is not quite the same) - it may seem a bit odd if you were not tuned into that fact.

The suggestions in order of preference are:

  1. What's Up - Whatsup.pdf - Use activity II from this sheet - Tonight's Sky but will need to stress the southern hemisphere navigation needed (the teaching pack contains refrence to the north star). Section D suggests using a mirror and flashlight but this is not nescessary. The ORBIT revision is available here: Stellarium/activity
  2. Sky Stories - Skystories.pdf provides an alternative/extra activity but will need adapting by the teachers to draw out the actual stellarium content.
  3. Moving Right Along - Moving right along.pdf again needs adapting and potentially removing some of the extra activities

Note: The linked pdf files containing lesson plans were created by Digitalis Education Solutions, Inc. (http://www.DigitalisEducation.com) and are provided free of charge as a public service to encourage the teaching of astronomy. They were written for use with a Digitarium planetarium system. (Licence: "Permission is granted to copy, distribute, and modify this document provided that existing copyright notices, the text of this license, and the text of the "Notice" section are not removed or modified, other than to add your own copyright notice for your modifications.")