Visit to National Space Centre

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This is another one that's going to be written up at greater length for Interactions, but on Friday I had a very interesting day at the National Space Centre in Leicester, which I visited to cover their new "Space Academy" educational programmes.

British and American rocket boosters in the National Space Centre's canteen
British and American rocket boosters in the National Space Centre's canteen

The idea is to use space as a hook to provide curriculum support for pupils from Key Stage 2 right up to post-16 education. The Centre's position as both a working facility and an educational institution makes it a great choice of location -- and they've got some interesting items lying around: some solar cells from Hubble that were retrieved in 1993 after becoming unusable following micrometeorite bombardment, a test-tube of dust from a Martian meteorite and the logbook from the unsuccessful Beagle mission to Mars, which worked from the Centre. And the two disused rocket boosters decorating the canteen.

I had to chuckle, though, after viewing the animated film on the life cycle of stars in their Space Theatre. Though produced by the Centre's in-house team, the show had been commissioned by a planetarium in Nashville -- which meant that describing the development of stars using the word "evolution" was expressly forbidden, as was any reference to the Big Bang.

 

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This page contains a single entry by Christopher White published on October 21, 2008 10:45 AM.

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