Hi Gould / Clint

I think the problem may be that instead of an approach where an amateur 
satellite promotes amateur radio via the science of satellites, most educators 
really need an amateur radio satellite to be a resource which can be used to 
teach the usual syllabus but in a more interesting way that captures the 
imagination of the students. So, think lesson plans, power points, theory, Java 
animation, video etc. All in manageable durations, perhaps at a few different 
levels.  And....make it useful for the 95% of time when ARISsat (etc) is not 
overhead when the lesson is happening. 
We can't get AMSAT volunteers involved in anything more than a fraction of 1% 
of lessons, so perhaps AMSAT as product placement in lesson resources is a good 
second choice.

Good luck

David  G0MRF






What do you need? Classroom lessons abound for all aspects of amateur radio 
as it applies to the satellites - from elementary school to college 
classrooms.

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Gould Smith <[email protected]>
To: Clint Bradford <[email protected]>; amsat-bb <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, 20 Nov 2011 21:45
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: In School ARSSat Demos / lessons


That is good to hear Clint.

What we need is exactly what EMike requested:
>With ARISSat-1's main mission being Educational I would like to hear about 
>people's experiences with
>schools in using ARISSat-1 as a teaching tool, in class demonstration, data 
>collection, etc.
>I am especially interested in hearing from educators, but anybody's 
>experience is welcome.

Gould, WA4SXM

-----Original Message----- 
From: Clint Bradford
Sent: Saturday, November 19, 2011 5:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: In School ARSSat Demos / lessons

>> ... With ARISSat-1's main mission being Educational I would like to hear 
>> about people's experiences with schools in using ARISSat-1 as a teaching 
>> tool ...

What do you need? Classroom lessons abound for all aspects of amateur radio 
as it applies to the satellites - from elementary school to college 
classrooms.

Each ARISS contact has a lot of work "behind the scenes" at the campuses. 
There are phenomenal teachers and school administrations who really get
behinds their ARISS projects.

Be a little more specific with what you need - and I can either assist you, 
or point you towards excellent resources.

Clint Bradford, K6LCS
NASA / ARISS school technical support
http://www.work-sat.com
909-241-7666
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Subscription settings: http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb

 
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