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A Proposed Astronomy Learning Progression For Remote Telescope Observation
Author(s) -
Timothy F. Slater,
Andrea C. Burrows,
Debbie French,
Richard A. Sanchez,
Coty B. Tatge
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of college teaching and learning/journal of college teaching and learning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2157-894X
pISSN - 1544-0389
DOI - 10.19030/tlc.v11i4.8857
Subject(s) - telescope , astronomy , the internet , physics , point (geometry) , stars , computer science , remote sensing , geography , world wide web , mathematics , geometry
Providing meaningful telescope observing experiences for students who are deeply urban or distantly rural place-boundor even daylight time-boundhas consistently presented a formidable challenge for astronomy educators. For nearly 2 decades, the Internet has promised unfettered access for large numbers of students to conduct remote telescope observing, but it has only been in recent years that the technology has become readily available. Now that this once fanciful possibility is becoming a reality, astronomy education researchers need a guiding theory on which to develop learning experiences. As one departure point, we propose a potential learning progression anchored on one end with recognizing that stars visible at night have describable locations and predictable motions, and anchored at the other with distant robotic telescopes can be programmed to record specific astronomical data for later analysis.

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