| 7. 
              Amateur Astronomers  The 
              U.S. has a large population of amateur astronomers, people whose 
              hobby is astronomical observing or following astronomical developments 
              in a serious sort of way. I like to divide the amateur community 
              into three categories: Research-level amateurs are those who have 
              sophisticated telescopes and detectors, or who carry out serious 
              observing programs. These amateurs are usually members of such specialized 
              organizations as the American Association of Variable Star Observers, 
              Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers, or the International 
              Amateur-Professional Photoelectric Photometry Group, or they are 
              working in conjunction with a professional astronomer in their community. 
              There are probably not more than a few hundred of this group in 
              our country.    Observing 
              amateurs are those who have a telescope and regularly take it out 
              for observing the sky, either for their own amusement or with a 
              community or school group. These amateurs are frequently members 
              of some of the more than 200 amateur clubs in the U.S., many of 
              which are, in turn, members of the umbrella organization called 
              the Astronomical League. The League currently has a combined membership 
              of almost 13,000 people. Armchair amateurs, on the other hand, are 
              those who mainly prefer to read about astronomy and may or may not 
              do some casual observing from time to time. Some of these amateurs 
              are members of local clubs, but many are not, and pursue their interest 
              in astronomy through magazines or books they read, programs they 
              watch on television, and lecture series they may attend. Some are 
              members of such national organizations as the Astronomical Society 
              of the Pacific or the Planetary Society. New converts to this group 
              these days can come from those browsing the many interesting astronomy 
              rest-stops on the information superhighway.    Many 
              members of the three groups are tied together by the two main magazines 
              for amateurs, Sky & Telescope and Astronomy. Astronomy had a circulation 
              in 1996 of 170,000, while S&T was at 110,000. Estimates of the total 
              number of amateurs in the U.S. range from 200,000 to 500,000, often 
              depending on how exactly you define the term. In any case, this 
              figure, 40 to 100 times the number of professional astronomers, 
              represents a tremendous population with potential in astronomy education. 
                 Many 
              amateurs are already involved in education, by going for occasional 
              visits to local schools or putting on neighborhood star parties, 
              where youngsters get their first look through a telescope. The amateur 
              community organizes a National Astronomy Day each spring, where 
              they make a special effort to bring telescopes to where people are 
              and show them the night sky. The Astronomical League has a number 
              of educational programs and publications, although they are limited 
              by being purely volunteer efforts with no budget to support them. 
                 But 
              much more could be done. Many amateurs have time, knowledge, energy, 
              and enthusiasm, which could much more actively be harnessed in the 
              service of education. Some professional astronomers and educators 
              worry that amateurs will tell students erroneous things; but at 
              the level of a 5th grade class, the physics of quasar energy mechanisms 
              isn't really a relevant topic. The phases of the Moon, why telescopes 
              are needed to observe celestial objects, or the joys of hunting 
              comets are much more appropriate to the reasoning level of the youngsters. 
                 This 
              was the thought behind Project ASTRO, a pilot program in the early 
              1990's at the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (supported by 
              the National Science Foundation and NASA): to set up ongoing partnerships 
              between amateur (and professional) astronomers and 4th to 9th grade 
              teachers in sites around California. After a training workshop for 
              the partners, astronomers visited "their" classroom not once, but 
              at least four times (some went as many as 10 times), and worked 
              with the teacher to present age-appropriate hands-on classroom and 
              after-school activities.    We 
              found that, with proper training, and when they are provided with 
              a suite of good activities and teaching resources, amateurs (and 
              professionals) can do an excellent job in helping students get excited 
              about astronomy and science in general. Project ASTRO has produced 
              The Universe at Your Fingertips, an 815-page loose-leaf notebook 
              of exemplary activities, resource lists, and teaching suggestions 
              that incorporate the best ideas from our project and many others 
              around the country, which is now in its second printing and is being 
              used by thousands of scientists and educators around the world. 
              A How-to Manual for Astronomer-Educator Partnerships and a short 
              video are also available through the project.    The 
              pilot program was so successful that NSF has funded the expansion 
              of the program to nine sites around the country, from Boston to 
              Seattle. The Clark Foundation is supporting a tenth site in Salt 
              Lake City. The program also offers training workshops for interested 
              partners at meetings attended by either professional or amateur 
              astronomers. Given the limited number of professional astronomers 
              in the country, however, any expansion of the program will clearly 
              depend on the active involvement of the amateur community.  table 
            of contents  8. 
              Astronomy Interpretation Community  In 
              some ways, the interpreters to the public are the most far-reaching 
              part of the astronomy education community, because they include 
              the media. It is sobering to remember that one episode of "Unsolved 
              Mysteries" on television is seen by far more people than all the 
              students any of us will ever teach during our entire careers.    The 
              astronomy interpretation community includes editors and reporters 
              at daily newspapers and magazines, producers and writers on radio 
              & television, the authors of introductory books on astronomical 
              topics, the writers of children's books, and the authors of astronomy 
              software and Web-sites. Let's look at this world briefly:  A. 
              Magazines                If 
              you examine a list of the top 100 magazines by circulation, you 
              do find some rays of hope amidst the gathering darkness of gossip 
              and entertainment magazines. In 1994, there was one in the top 5 
              U.S. magazines that regularly features very high quality astronomy 
              articles: can you guess which magazine that is? It's National Geographic 
              (with a circulation of about 9.5 million).    In 
              the top 20, we have Time and Newsweek, both of which have had excellent 
              physical science reporting, although both are now tending toward 
              shorter and more superficial articles. The top 30 includes Smithsonian 
              and the top 40, Popular Science. And one of the largest circulation 
              periodicals in the country, the Sunday newspaper supplement called 
              Parade (which is mostly pap), regularly featured wonderful essays 
              by the late Carl Sagan which extolled the scientific perspective 
              and debunk popular pseudo-sciences. David Levy (the comet hunter) 
              has now been hired to continue this series.    In 
              the category of smaller circulation special interest magazines, 
              we have a number that do an excellent job of reporting astronomy 
              to their readers: In addition to Sky & Telescope and Astronomy (which 
              we have already mentioned), there are Discover, Scientific American, 
              American Scientist, and Air and Space. Excellent and regular coverage 
              also appears in the news pages of such magazines as Science, Nature, 
              or Science News. Plus many of the astronomical and space interest 
              societies issue their own magazines, such as The Planetary Report 
              from the Planetary Society, Mercury from the Astronomical Society 
              of the Pacific, or Ad Astra from the National Space Society. Here, 
              although specialist occasionally complain about a subtle point being 
              missed, the reporting is very, very good indeed, and astronomy stands 
              out among sciences as receiving and offering the best coverage for 
              readers with a serious interest in the field. Of course such readers 
              are relatively small in number compared to the population of the 
              country.  table 
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