Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Saturday, August 17, 2013

My New Best Friend. Aleta Clegg's Newest Book Release. Space and Science News. Gigantic IMAGINARIUM

Hello Troops,
     You know how you think you don't need something until you have it only to discovery you can't live without it once you get it?  That happened to me yesterday.  All teachers at Renaissance (home of the future Farpoint Space Education Center) were issued iPad minis yesterday.  We spent the rest of the day in an iPad class where we learned how to use it in our classrooms.  The last half hour or so the presenter showed us the must have apps and games.  After the class I went back to my desk, sat down with my iPad and got better acquainted.
     I have a new best friend and it talks to me.  Siri is an interesting application that I'm sure I'll get use to, although she did disappointment this morning.  She couldn't tell me where my other sock disappeared to (yesterday was laundry day).
     School starts on Tuesday.  This will be the first time since the 1989/1990 school year where I'll be in the classroom all day.  The realization is settling in.  I'm not in panic mode yet, but just wait until Monday night.

Mr. W.


Space Center Legend Aleta Clegg has a New Book on the Market



It's out in paperback! And it looks gorgeous. And it's only $6.64 on Amazon right now. http://www.amazon.com/Brain-Candy-Tales-Not-so-silly-Horror/dp/1492108952/



The Amazon Review
Ready to feel the chills running down your spine? Wait, that's just the green gelatin monster from one of the stories in this collection of very silly (and a few not-so-silly) horror stories. Vampires, werewolves, demons, mummies, and zombies compete with evil little Shirley Temple look-alikes and their collectibles, centerpieces and church women, cops and monster hunters, for your laughs. It's a light-hearted take on the horror genre.

Space and Science News
     

Science Summary of The Week

➤ New Cancer Treatment: http://is.gd/5X4f4q
➤ Artificial Heart: http://is.gd/2OtEYT
➤ Brain Consciousness: http://is.gd/mdWt3g
➤ Personalized Jetpacks: http://is.gd/7XuN2c
➤ New Species: http://is.gd/5mAfYD
➤ Brain Personality Traits: http://is.gd/u9kYUJ


ISS: Russian EVA breaks time record


NASA computer image of spacewalk in progress. Credit: NASA and NASASpaceFlight.com.

Yesterday morning cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Alexander Misurkin set a new Russian spacewalk duration record, coming in from the EVA after 7 hours and 29 minutes of maintenance and preparation for the new module coming later this year.


Yurchikhin outside the ISS, installing cable TV. I mean, installing cables for future power routing.

In fact, the cable routing was to extend ethernet wiring from the Zarya and Poisk modules, in preparation for the new module to replace the expiring Pirs module. AT one point in the EVA, cosmonaut Yurchikhim was positioned attached to the Russian cargo boom arm and moved into a working position outside Zarya to work on power cables.


Yurchikhin on the Strela robot arm.

While Yurchikhin continued preparations for the module installation, Misurkin installed an experiment on the outside of the Poisk module and then worked on cable installation as well. This was Misurkins second EVA, and Yurchikhins 7th (!). The EVA was the 172nd ISS spacewalk.
Mark Daymont
Farpoint Educator








Above ground swimming pool

Romanian Doritos "Cool Ranch" renamed.
Only on a New York subway

Anybody want to join the sloth gang?

Awesome painting job with glow in the dark paint

A difficult choice

Someone doesn't know their landmarks
North and South Korea at night


Do you know what that really is?



What Mars would look like if it had water



Creativity: A

Now you know



What's the story here?

A forward thinking Hotel



There's a sad story here





Found on the bottom of a pizza board




A restaurant server could have some fun with this cup. 

Practical?


I'm thinking of bringing this to my students

A South African crosswalk

In a school's music room
Her dad got a bit creative with scissors and construction paper

Great tape dispenser





Famous historical BW photos colorized 

A southern gas station in the 1930's
Can you figure out how the gas pump worked?
That's your challenge for the day

The magic carpet sits on his skateboard

A Thor's Hammer nightlight





A cool office

Only seen at a Scottish wedding :)


An orange juice toast to the first day of school




Economy class seating on a Pan Am 747 in the 1960's.
(by the way, that's real food on the trolley)


Street art optical illusion.

Forest sculpture



The world's first hipster found in London



This mom means business.
I don't think junior will bully again

What to do when bored at McDonalds







Wednesday, August 14, 2013

I'm Back in the Classroom Full Time and Finding the Charter Movement Refreshing. Chef BJ "Ramsey" Warner Cooks for Galaxy Camp. Space and Science News. The Imaginarium.

Hello Troops,
     My summer vacation is over.  It was the my first in 23 years.  I'm back to work at Renaissance Academy.
     Its strange being at a charter school after spending 30 years in a district school: the charter school's work environment is different, their focus is less test driven with more emphasis placed on educating the whole child by not limiting the arts and humanities.  The students wear uniforms in my new school.  I get one hour and 45 minutes prep period during the school day, not counting the 30 minutes before and after school. My sixth grade students have speciality teachers for social studies, science, art, music, PE and world language.
     This school believes in shared responsibility.  The standard large school district one size fits all, top down leadership model seems outdated and antiquated when compared with a school run by a business manager, who shares responsibility with a dean of students, a faculty executive committee and their version of the PTA.  
     This charter school is not threatened by grassroots innovation and involvement, in fact they expect and encourage it; so different from a normal large district administration which sees such movements as threats to their power and authority.
     Perhaps it is time to pass new laws allowing individual district schools to limit their association with bureaucratic administration and declare either complete independence or a limited partnership with their local district.  This would give individual neighborhoods more involvement in their local schools and force administrators to focus more on parent's wishes; after all it should be about choice in education. Parents should have a choice.  Its not rocket science.      
     Before leaving for the day I stopped in the office to fill out my employment papers.  All went well until I got to the Homeland Security form where I had to show the secretary my social security card and driver's license.
     "I don't have my social security card," I confessed.  The secretary's face dropped in surprise.
     "You don't have a social security card?" she questioned.
     "I have a number," I explained, "I just don't have the card.  I don't know where it is.  I haven't had to apply for a job since 1983."
     She handed me a form showing other forms of identification I could use instead of a social security card.  "Do you have a passport?"
     "Yes, I HAVE two passports."
     "Then that will do, but why do you have two?"
     "They're both expired."  She shook her head showing me we were back to square one.
     My job tonight is to search every corner of the house to try to find the necessary documents necessary to prove to Homeland Security that I deserve to live and work in the United States.  Its that, or I'll be on the next deportation plane headed to who knows where.

Mr. W.

The Discovery Space Center's Very Own Chef BJ "Ramsey" Warner.   



This photo was taken early yesterday morning as Chef BJ "Ramsey" Warner served the DSC's famously delicious seven course breakfast to the last Galaxy campers.
     "We advertise a seven course breakfast and that's just what our campers get," Chef BJ said as he examined the serving table hoping to find one item, just one item out of position so he could rip the head off the negligent intern.  The seven courses were:  Chocolate milk, orange juice, ketchup, gogurts, maple syrup, scrambled eggs and pancakes.
     The chef looks friendly in this photo, but you wouldn't have wanted to see him twenty minutes earlier in the kitchen.  His temper makes the real Chef Ramsey's seem tame.  

Space and Science News




Personal Jetpack Gets Flight Permit for Manned Test

The New Zealand developers of a personalised jetpack said Tuesday that aviation regulators have issued the device with a flying permit, allowing for manned test flights.
Martin Aircraft chief executive Peter Coker said the certification was a significant milestone in the development of the jetpack, which the company hopes to begin selling next year.
"For us it's a very important step because it moves it out of what I call a dream into something which I believe we're now in a position to commercialise and take forward very quickly," Coker told AFP.
The jetpack is the brainchild of inventor Glenn Martin, who began working on it in his Christchurch garage more than 30 years ago.

Inspired by childhood television shows such as "Thunderbirds" and "Lost in Space", Martin set out in the early 1980s to create a jetpack suitable for everyday use by ordinary people with no specialist pilot training.  Read More

How to Live on Mars

If humanity hopes to establish a lasting presence on Mars, it will have to learn to live off the land.
Ambitious exploration efforts have always aimed for self-sufficiency, but the need is especially acute when the new terrain being traversed is another planet. Extensive resupply from Earth would be prohibitively expensive, experts say, so exploiting Red Planet resources is crucial to making pioneering manned missions affordable in the short term and Mars settlement sustainable over the long haul.  Read More






Evacuate Earth!



"If we faced a countdown to destruction, could we build a spacecraft to take us to new and habitable worlds? Can we Evacuate Earth? NGC's one and a half hour special examines this terrifying but scientifically plausible scenario by exploring how we could unite to ensure the survival of the human race."
Video: http://ow.ly/mik7E


The Imaginarium
Your imagination recharging station


Two friends saw a photo in this construction site.




Not just any fondue.  An ice cream fondue




Junior's first day back to school



When people stop laughing, everything's lost


A sign on a London street corner

Multiplication, the Japanese way.

A bull in a china shop