Special
Events
We
have lined up some special events during the Conference period.
Please see each individual event for details and requirements.
SETI
SUNDAY: A SETI Institute Speakers Series
Sunday, September 13, 2009
1:00 - 5:00 pm
Sequoia Ballroom
Expand
your mind and your perspective with an afternoon of thought-provoking
talks by scientists and researchers from the SETI Institute, from
1-5 pm. The event will be MC-ed by Mr. Tom Pierson, CEO of the SETI
Institute.
1
pm: Finding a Home for ET: The Kepler Mission
Dr. Douglas Caldwell, Instrument Scientist, Kepler Mission
Kepler is the first NASA mission that is capable of finding Earth-size
planets in the habitable zone of Sun-like stars. Caldwell will share
his personal and scientific thoughts on the Kepler Mission and share
some of the exciting initial data that has arrived.
1:55
pm: The Real ET
Dr. Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer, SETI Institute
New technologies may confirm the existence of intelligence elsewhere
within two decades. In case of contact, one of the first things
we'll want to know is: what are the aliens like? Dr. Shostak will
discuss why even speculating about the construction and lifestyle
of extraterrestrials -- long before we've found them -- could be
important in shaping a productive SETI strategy.
2:50
pm: Break
3
pm: Discovering ET: What's Next?
Dr. Margaret Race, Principal Investigator, Carl Sagan Center
for the Study of Life in the Universe
ET may be found through interception of signals from alien civilizations,
or discovered under a microscope examining Martian soil. In either
case, what are the scientific and ethical outcomes of discovering
alien life? Race will discuss her work in planetary protection,
societal issues and ethics when dealing with ET.
3:55
pm: Reflections on the Drake Equation
Dr. Frank Drake, Director of the Carl Sagan Center for the Study
of Life in the Universe
Dr. Drake, who wrote the Drake Equation 50 years ago to calculate
the potential for inhabitable planets with possibly intelligent
communicative species, will share his thoughts on the equation:
what have we discovered, and what mysteries remain to explore?
Note:
ASP Conference registrants, SETI Members, ASP members, Sunday workshop
attendees, and AANC meeting attendees (with registration badges)
are admitted to the talks at no additional charge.
Annual
Members Meeting
Sunday, September 13, 2009
5:30 - 6:15 pm
Oak Room
Free
to all ASP Members. No registration to the ASP Conference is necessary.
Opening
Reception
Sunday, September 13, 2009
6:30 - 9:00 pm
Westin Ballroom
Conference
attendees are invited to our opening reception at the hotel featuring
a preview of our exhibitors and lots of food.The reception will
feature a screening of the film "Inspire Me!" from Brad
McLain of the Space Science Institute following the adventures of
a group of teachers experiencing the weightless "flights of
discovery" program.
Opening
Keynote Address
Monday, September 14, 2009
8:00 - 9:30 am
Sequoia Ballroom
Planck
scientist Bruce Partridge of Haverford College, astrophysicist Lynne
Hillenbrand of Caltech, and astrobiologist David Grinspoon of the
Denver Museum of Nature and History will open the conference with
a joint keynote address chronicling the significance of 400 years
of scientific advancement to launch the meeting in this International
Year of Astronomy and Year of Science.
NASA
Town Hall Meeting
Monday, September 14, 2009
5:15 - 7:00 pm
Sequoia Ballroom
The
NASA Science Mission Directorate will host a NASA Town Hall, hosted
by SMD EPO Lead Stephanie Stockman, to include information on its
new Science Education and Public Outreach Forums (SEPOFs).
Public
Talk by Dr. John M. Grunsfeld, NASA
Rescuing Hubble: An Astronaut's Adventures in Space
Monday, September 14, 2009
7:30 pm
Sequoia Ballroom
In
May, 2009, NASA astronaut John Grunsfeld made his fifth space shuttle
flight and third visit to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) as part
of the STS-125 mission aboard shuttle Atlantis. During the mission,
Dr. Grunsfeld performed three of the mission's five space walks
that installed two new instruments, repaired two others, and outfitted
the HST with new batteries, gyroscopes, fine guidance sensors and
thermal blankets. Dr. Grunsfeld will share his and his crewmates'
adventures in this final mission to the HST, offering his insights
on the challenges and successes of the mission and what it means
for the HST and our continued explorations of the universe.
Dr.
John Grunsfeld received his bachelor of science degree in physics
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his master of
science and PhD. degrees in physics from the University of Chicago.
Specializing in x-ray and gamma ray astronomy research, high–energy
cosmic ray studies, and the development of new detectors and instrumentation,
he held several academic positions including Senior Research Fellow
at the California Institute of Technology prior to his selection
as astronaut in 1992. Between 1995 and 2009, Dr. Grunsfeld flew
five shuttle missions, including a 16-day mission of ultraviolet
observations with the Astro observatory, the fifth mission to the
Russian Mir space station, and three servicing missions to the Hubble
Space Telescope, including the final servicing mission in 2009.
He also served as NASA Chief Scientist in 2003–4. Dr. Grunsfeld
has logged more than 58 days in space, and 58 hours and 30 minutes
of extravehicular activity in eight space walks.
2009
ASP Awards Banquet
Tuesday September 15, 2009
Bayshore Ballroom
Co-sponsored
with California Space Grant Consortium and Capitol College
The
ASP will present this year's awards at the Society's Annual Meeting
Awards Banquet at the Westin SFO in Millbrae, Tuesday, Seotember
15, 2009. The annual ASP awards, including the prestigious Bruce
Medal, recognize meritorious work by professional and amateur astronomers,
science educators, and those who engage in public outreach. Find
out more about the 2009 award winners including Dr. Frank Shu,
the Bruce Gold Medalist. Conference attendance is not required,
however you will need to purchase a ticket to attend this banquet.
Tickets will be available to purchase onsite until end of day September
14.
Reception
6:30pm
Sit-down Dinner 7:30pm
Fee: $65
Plenary
Panel Sessions
September 14-16, 2009
Sequoia Ballroom
Monday,
September 14, 2009
1:30 - 3:00 pm
Collaboration Across the Sciences: How Can We Improve Our Practice
and Prepare the Future Workforce?
David
Grinspoon, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, moderator
Emily CoBabe-Ammann, Emily A. CoBabe & Associates, panelist
Pamela Harman, SETI Institute, panelist
Edward E. Prather, Center for Astronomy Education, University
of Arizona, panelist
In
the pursuit of scientific knowledge, not only do techniques and
instrumentation continually change, the quality of questions being
asked also evolves. Age old questions such as "are we alone?"
as well as new problems such as global climate change require multi/interdisciplinary
perspectives and collaboration, pushing scientists to explore between
the specializations. What skills will our students need to function
in this emerging paradigm? How should our work as EPO practitioners
reflect this when so much of the educational landscape is mired
in specialized, standardized testing? Are there benefits and tradeoffs
in contextualized learning? What are lessons learned so far? Think
about it and come share.
Session
Goals:
-
Introduce the growing multi-disciplinary nature of science.
-
Provide a framework for general EPO sessions later in conference.
-
Discuss educational theory as needed.
-
Elicit ideas for professional development of EPO professionals.
David
Grinspoon is a planetary scientist specializing in the evolution
of planetary surfaces, atmospheres and habitability. He is Curator
of Astrobiology at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, and
Adjunct Professor of Astrophysical and Planetary Science at the
University of Colorado. David is author of Venus Revealed
and the award-winning Lonely Planets: The Natural Philosophy
of Alien Life. He was awarded the 2006 Carl Sagan Medal for
Public Communication of Planetary Science by the American Astronomical
Society.
Emily
CoBabe-Ammann is Executive Director of Emily A. CoBabe &
Associates, a non-profit education management and consulting group.
She is currently the higher education lead for two NASA Science
Mission Directorate Science Education and Public Outreach Forums,
as well as co-investigator on the CU-Boulder-based Colorado Center
for Lunar Dust and Atmospheric Studies, a NASA Lunar Science Institute
node. She has recently appeared before the NRC Panel on Meeting
the Workforce Needs for the National Vision for Space Exploration.
Pamela
Harman is the Education and Outreach Manager at the SETI Institute,
where she combines her background in engineering and high school
classroom teaching. Pamela leads the Astrobiology Summer Science
Experience for Teachers (ASSET) at the SETI Institute, has served
on a county-wide biotech education steering committee, and written
and piloted material for the Voyages Through Time science
curriculum. Her contributions to professional development workshops
and short courses reflect a passion for research on learning and
education standards.
Edward
E. Prather is an Associate Staff Scientist with Steward Observatory
and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Astronomy at the University
of Arizona. He is Executive Director of the NASA and NSF funded
Center for Astronomy Education (CAE) at the University of Arizona.
CAE has created a national collaboration of astronomy faculty, post-docs,
graduate and undergrad students who are actively engaged in conducting
fundamental research on core issues related to the teaching and
learning of Astro-101 and other STEM topics.
Tuesday,
September 15, 2009
8:00 - 9:30 am
The International Year of Astronomy: Can We Keep the Party Going?
Paul
Knappenberger, Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum, moderator
Doris Daou, NASA Lunar Science Institute, panelist
Stephen Pompea, National Optical Astronomy Observatory, panelist
Deborah Scherrer, Stanford University, panelist
The
International Year of Astronomy has fostered significant grass-roots
efforts on the part of the EPO, science, and amateur communities
in spite of paralleling the worst economic crisis in decades. Is
it over on December 31? Did we "win?" What have we learned
from IYA and other international years? Can we keep the momentum
going? How do we keep the momentum going? How do we assess
the effort and the results? What worked and what didn't? How do
we keep astronomy education and outreach relevant in an age of foreclosures
and job layoffs? WWGD? ("What would Galileo do?") Join
the discussion as we look forward.
Session
Goals:
-
Keeping the IYA momentum high.
-
Provide a framework for later IYA sessions.
-
Begin to conceptualize IYA's legacy in 2010 and beyond.
-
Begin the reflection on IYA to inform later EPO efforts.
Paul
Knappenberger is President of Adler Planetarium & Astronomy
Museum in Chicago, America's first planetarium and home of the Telescopes:
Through the Looking Glass exhibition celebrating the 400th anniversary
of the telescope. He currently chairs the Chicago Council for Science
and Technology, has served as President of the Association of Science-Technology
Centers, and has led numerous efforts to develop science and math
exhibits and to create educational activities for elementary and
secondary schools over the past 35 years.
Doris
Daou is the Director of Communication and Outreach for the NASA
Lunar Science Institute at the Ames Research Center. In this role,
Doris developed and led a multi-institution collaboration to bring
the International Year of Astronomy From Earth to the Universe
exhibition to the Bay Area. She has served as a Program Officer
in NASA's Science Mission Directorate, and is a co-author of the
internationally praised tactile multi-wavelength astronomy book
Touch the Invisible Sky.
Stephen
Pompea is Manager of Science Education at the National Optical
Astronomy Observatory in Tucson, and the U.S. project director for
the International Year of Astronomy 2009. He has been principal
investigator or co-investigator on eight major NSF-funded national
science education projects, and is also an adjunct faculty member
at the Universities of Arizona and Arkansas. His latest project
is the Galileoscope–a high-quality, low-cost telescope kit
developed for the International Year of Astronomy.
Deborah
Scherrer is the Director of the Stanford SOLAR Center, the education
and public outreach arm for the Solar Observatories Group at Stanford
University. She has been involved in an International Heliophysical
Year (IHY) project that has placed about 300 solar monitoring instruments
in high schools worldwide. Deborah has served as the chair of the
American Geophysical Union's Space Physics and Aeronomy Education
and Public Outreach Committee, which also held the function of USA
Advisory Committee to the IHY.
Tuesday,
September 15, 2009
1:30 - 3:00 pm
Refining Our Practice: Can We Really Make an Impact?
Thomas
Foster, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, moderator
Mary Dussault, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics,
panelist
Dennis Schatz, Pacific Science Center, panelist
EPO
has made great leaps forward in the past decade, incorporating new
technologies and reaching out to new audiences, all with an increased
awareness of the need to measure and understand the effectiveness
of our efforts. In an age of increasing accountability, how do we
really know what impact we're having? What can we really assess,
and how do we best to assess it? How can we find ways to evaluate
formal and informal programs more effectively? Do we focus on content,
or skills, or both? Can we really make a difference in science literacy?
Can we strengthen our efforts with a more holistic, connected approach?
How do we achieve that? Come share your perspectives with the panelists.
Session
Goals:
-
Motivate awareness and necessity of assessment in EPO.
-
Provide a framework for later EPO assessment sessions.
-
Explicitly identifying the benefits and limitations of assessment
data.
-
Connecting program goals to assessments and delivery to assessment.
Thomas
Foster is an Associate Professor of Physics at Southern Illinois
University Edwardsville, teaching all levels of physics courses,
intro astronomy, and science education pre-service teachers courses.
His research interests include human problem-solving, science education
validity, reliability, and ethics. Tom serves on the AER Board of
Editors and has been on numerous American Association of Physics
Teacher committees. He is very active in Illinois teacher associations
and individually with formal educators in the region.
Dennis
Schatz is Senior Vice President at Pacific Science Center in
Seattle, Washington. He provides leadership for a number of Pacific
Science Center's major initiatives, including Washington State LASER
and Portal to the Public. Dennis recently served on the National
Research Council's Expert Oversight Panel to assist in the development
of the practitioner's book Surrounded by Science: Learning Science
in Informal Environments. He has received numerous honors, including
the National Science Teachers Association 2009 Faraday Science Communicator
Award.
Mary
Dussault is a science education program manager at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics (CfA) where she directs a number of national
astronomy and physical science education projects. Through her exhibition
and curriculum development work at the CfA, and her prior work at
Boston's Museum of Science, Mary has over 25 years of experience
researching and developing inquiry-based science learning experiences
for a variety of settings: informal education environments, for
the classroom, and for teacher professional development programs.
Wenesday,
September 16, 2009
8:00 - 9:30 am
The Future is Here: Can EPO Navigate the Digital Age?
Stephanie
Shipp, Lunar and Planetary Institute, moderator
Nancy Dribin, Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum, panelist
Pamela Gay, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, panelist
Stephanie Stockman, NASA Science Mission Directorate, panelist
We're
not in our parent's world anymore -- we live in a world increasingly
run by electrons and hand-held devices that inform, entertain, connect,
and fragment our audiences into an infinite-number of special-interest
groups with microscopic attention spans that form and reform for
shorter periods of time. How does EPO evolve to match the new media
and electronic realities? Is there still a place for storytelling,
for laddered learning experiences, for traditional methods? How
do we adapt? How do we rise to the new challenges of the new age?
Text us about it -- but come in person and interact person-to-person
as well!
Session
Goals:
-
Motivate EPO practice in the digital age.
-
Provide a framework for our EPO sessions using new technology.
-
Illuminate and discuss various tech-driven EPOs (Google Earth/Sky,
Wikipedia, World Wide Telescope, Facebook, Twitter, Galaxy Zoo,
SETI@Home).
-
Elicit ideas for professional development of EPO professionals.
Stephanie
Shipp is Manager of Education and Public Outreach at the Lunar
and Planetary Institute (LPI), and adjunct professor at Rice University.
At LPI she oversees the design, development, and implementation
of planetary science educational materials and programs for formal
and informal educators and the general public. These programs increasingly
involve integration of social media, including online forums, Facebook,
Twitter, and Flickr as a means of establishing bi-directional communication
with the intended audiences.
Nancy
Ross Dribin is the Director of Interactive Media at the Adler
Planetarium. She has over fourteen years of experience developing
interactive media resources and programs for use in educational
settings, including the EDC Center for Children and Technology,
Shedd Aquarium, and Chicago History Museum. She currently oversees
all new media projects at the Adler, including the popular technology
camp programs, podcast series, social media initiatives, evaluation
of exhibition multimedia interactives, and the ongoing redesign
of the Adler website.
Pamela Gay is visiting assistant professor of physics at Southern
Illinois University Edwardsville, where she teaches introductory
astronomy and physics, and as instructor at the University of Swinburne
in Australia as part of its astronomy distance learning program.
She is on the Council of the American Association of Variable Star
Observers (AAVSO) and chairs its education committee. Gay is one
of the cofounders of the podcast "Slacker Astronomy,"
currently serves as co-host of the "Astronomy Cast" podcast,
and is co-chair of US "new media" efforts for the International
Year of Astronomy.
Pamela
Gay is visiting assistant professor of physics at Southern Illinois
University Edwardsville, where she teaches introductory astronomy
and physics, and instructor at the University of Swinburne in Australia
as part of its astronomy distance learning program. She is on the
Council of the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
and chairs its education committee. Pamela is one of the cofounders
of the podcast Slacker Astronomy, currently serves as co-host
of the Astronomy Cast podcast, and is co-chair of US "new
media" efforts for the International Year of Astronomy.
Stephanie
Stockman is the Education and Public Outreach Lead for NASA's
Science Mission Directorate, and brings to that position a background
in geology and science education. She started working at NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center as a geology graduate student, and by
1997 was the Education Coordinator for the Laboratory for Terrestrial
Physics. She has developed and implemented education and outreach
programs for a variety of NASA missions in Earth and space science
including Landsat 7 (land remote sensing), EOS Aura (atmospheric
chemistry), MESSENGER (mission to Mercury), New Horizons (mission
to Pluto) and Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).
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