Event details
Montana Learning Center at Canyon Ferry Lake and Montana State University are offering a free, non-credit online course to educators interested in learning how to use a state-of-the-art robotic telescope and integrate its image-capturing and research capabilities into their course curricula. The course is open to U.S. high school science teachers and Montana community college or branch campus instructors of physics or astronomy.
This course gives teachers and their students unprecedented access to a world-class research facility, and teachers will learn how to use the observatory and capture images for student projects. These activities are suitable for any level of high school or community college/branch campus student, and range from astrophotography to research. The course will also instruct teachers on how to facilitate students’ contributions to publishable research. A NASA grant from the Northwest Earth and Space Sciences Pathways program is funding the Montana Learning Center’s further development and presentation of this teacher training course, in collaboration with Montana State University’s National Teacher Enhancement Network. Classroom Observatory will be taught online, enabling teachers to participate, regardless of location. Classroom Observatory will introduce participants to robotic telescopes and teach them to: • Remotely operate the Learning Center’s 16-inch, research-grade, Ritchey-Chretien telescope, located atop a mountain in New Mexico. • Take, prepare, and evaluate astronomical images. • Evaluate observing programs for their effectiveness in the classroom. • Create a curriculum for classroom use of a robotic telescope. • Use photometric filters to create research projects. The course provides participants up to 30 hours of renewal units through the Montana Office of Public Instruction. Upon successful completion of the course, teachers will be set up with an account for their students at the observatory. Ryan Hannahoe, executive director of the Learning Center, and Peter Detterline, lead astronomy instructor for the Learning Center, teach the course. In addition to the Northwest Earth and Space Sciences Pathways grant, the Learning Center received a donation by Christian Perez valued at $12,000 per year that allows the use of the Learning Center’s Ritchey-Chretien telescope for the course. The Learning Center also received a donation from New Mexico Skies Remote Observatories for the telescope’s hosting, valued at $18,000 per year. The course will run from October 7th, 2024, through November 24th, 2024, and registration is available now. Sign up here! Applications are due by September 30th. Teachers can contact Ryan Hannahoe at MontanaLearningCenter@gmail.com for more information.