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Universe in the Classroom to North Wales
20 January 2016

The first Universe in the Classroom 2.0 primary school teacher-training event took place last December 2015 in Wrexham (Wales, UK), during which participant teachers were provided with access to a global network of powerful robotic telescopes, and the resources and know-how to use them to explore the night sky from their classrooms.

During the first phase of Universe in the Classroom (January 2014–March 2015) 100 welsh primary schools were selected to receive a set of free astronomy education resources, including Universe-in-a-Box education toolkits and Earth balls. From these select schools, over 800 schoolchildren were reached directly through workshops and 131 teachers were trained during Science CPD. The first round of CPD workshops covered curriculum topics in the local solar neighbourhood, such as seasons, lunar phases and the planets. All these topics are covered in the Universe-in-a-Box hands-on activity box.

In March 2015, phase two of the project began: Universe in the Classroom 2.0. For the next three years, Universe in the Classroom will be providing complementary digital resources to welsh primary schools to be used alongside the hands-on materials. The most impressive new resource is access to the LCOGT network  14 powerful telescopes across the globe. Universe in the Classroom will be hosting several more CPD events to provide schools with the know-how and confidence to use these telescopes in their classroom, to inspire young children and spark a passion for science and learning in primary school students. Universe in the Classroom will also be inviting new schools to participate in the project, in addition to continuing our partnership with the 100 schools selected last year.

To maximise the reach of Universe in the Classroom and ensure that schools outside of the populous South Wales region were offered the opportunity to participate and benefit from the project, primary schools from each of the 22 Welsh counties were invited to participate in training events and school workshops. A third of schools participating in the first phase of Universe in the Classroom lie outside the populous South Wales area, including around 20 enthusiastic schools in North Wales. Therefore, the first Universe in the Classroom 2.0 teacher CPD of Techniquest was hosted in Wrexham

North Wales

On 10th December Universe in the Classroom welcomed teachers from eight schools across the North of the country -- from Anglesey, Conwy and Wrexham – including a mix of partner schools and new schools. The training focussed on showing teachers how to use the professional-quality LCOGT robotic telescopes to take breath-taking and inspiring images of the night sky, giving them confidence to control the telescopes and providing ideas on how to link them with core topics. To help teachers integrate the telescopes into their lessons, each school was given an activity book containing 15 activity guides (plus student worksheets, diagrams and how-to guides) covering topics relevant to using the robotic telescope network, such as Time Zones, the Scale of the Solar System and Light Pollution.

During the visit to North Wales, Universe in the Classroom also hosted astronomy workshops in two schools for over 50 students.

If you would like to explore or print any of the activities used as part of Universe in the Classroom, visit the Resources page:http://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/physicsoutreach/universe-in-the-classroom/universe-in-the-classroom-resources/

About Universe in the Classroom

The Cardiff School of Physics and Astronomy is reaching out to primary schools and communities across Wales, hoping to spark a curiosity about the Universe in young children.

Universe in the Classroom is an initiative that provides improved teaching methods and innovative tools to modernise and enhance the way STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are taught to young children. Since 2014 the programme has trained over 130 Welsh primary school teachers from 100 schools to use the new resources, which include a 0.4-m robotic telescope, Universe-in-a-Box educational toolkits and dozens of enquiry-based learning activities.

To carry out this ambitious project, which plans to reach 60,000 children over a decade, Universe in the Classroom has recruited a diverse team of enthusiastic science undergraduates and postgraduates to act as Stellar Role Models (STARS) and demonstrate to the next generation that science is for everyone. These volunteers have already organised and hosted dozens of astronomy workshops for children and are now putting emphasis on exploring the cosmos in classrooms with the Las Cumbres Observatory robotic telescope network.

This project is run in partnership with Universe Awareness and Las Cumbres Observatory.

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