Thursday, August 23, 2012

New telescope toys

We got some new equipment for the lab telescope - a moon filter to increase clarity and a camera mount to help us take pictures. We're still learning to use the camera mount, but jr. scientist A is having fun taking pictures and movies of the moon.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Expectations

Although we've had our fair share of "dud" experiments, some experiments, albeit technically successful, don't land with the jr. scientists. It seems that there is what I can only refer to as an expectation gap. The experiments that have the biggest wow factor tend to be those that defy expectations. I suspect this is why bubbles are so fascinating to young children, and for adults it takes the bubble-suspended-in-space experiment to make bubbles cool. Likewise, the realm of possible is considerably smaller for adults, and some things that are expectation-defying for adults are just normal occurrences for kids. The other night Jr. Scientist A, myself, friend-of-the-lab David, and visiting Jr. Scientist S went to a mars rover landing party. As the rover landed on mars and sent back the first photos, the adults made a valiant effort to convince the kids that this was a big deal and really cool. The excitement of the moment was somewhat lost on the jr. scientists, and I suspect that the muted reaction was related to Jr. Scientist A's question to me earlier that day asking if we could go to mars the next day. I guess when making a day trip to mars is part of your normal expectations, seeing a grainy snapshot from the red planet just isn't that exciting.