What a hectic
day! Almost immediately after I arrived at the museum, a load of large school
groups (mostly sixth through eighth graders) began to come in, ready for their
end-of-year field trips. For each group, we ran basically the same thing: a planetarium
show first (“The Life and Death of Stars” for the first group, then myths and legends
in the stars for the next two groups), followed by a trip to the observatory to
look at the sun through the big telescope. As you can imagine, doing three of
these programs back-to-back got pretty boring – there’s only so many times you
can hear the story of Perseus and Andromeda. Furthermore, the second two groups
were extraordinarily large and rather ill-behaved, being loud and disorganized.
The experience was useful, however, in giving me experience with shepherding
large groups as well as maintaining order during a presentation. (Personally, I
have a tendency to get rather annoyed with people who won’t sit still and shut
up, but witnessing Clyde (one of my supervisors) handle the crowd calmly was
educational.) All in all, the morning wore me out with walking back and forth
across the museum and guiding tours.
Perhaps the
most fun part of the day came at the end, just as I was about to leave. As it
turns out, the planetarium has hundreds, if not thousands, of slides, the kind
used in carousel slide projectors (see example). Most of these images, although
beautiful and unique, are not digitized, forcing the astronomy staff (i.e.,
student volunteers) to go through the slides one by one, picking out the ones
we want to save for further use. (The rest, along with the slide projectors,
will probably be donated to a school somewhere with limited educational
supplies.) Thus, for the last fifteen minutes of the day, I helped sort some of
these slides, marveling at the really cool images the museum has of the
planets, nebulae, and other celestial bodies.
Being able to maintain order among large groups of school children is always a useful skill. A much busier varied day, than your first day on the job!
ReplyDeleteJacob, this seems like a interesting project! I find it really cool that you get to work with the Planetarium and the observatory. I would never be able to handle all of those children. Just trying to get through all the crowds on my way down the Perkins in the morning annoys me. So are you basically the guide that runs the show in the planetarium? I remember going to those as a kid and found them AMAZING. These slides also sound very intriguing. You should try and take one for a show-and-tell type final project! That would be so cool.
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