Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sky main subject at schools

Eclipse offers students a chance to connect with science.

- DAVE PEROZEK

Local educators see Monday’s solar eclipse as a chance for students to connect with science.

Many schools across Northwest Arkansas plan to provide students the protective glasses they need to view the partial eclipse, which will peak at 1:12 p.m. Monday. The moon is expected to obscure up to 91 percent of the sun in this region.

The Springdale School District began preparing for the event in the spring when it arranged to purchase 25,000 pairs of protective glasses, said Jake Beers, an elementary school science teacher on special assignment for the district. Springdale serves more than 22,000 students.

The district bought the glasses at a discounted rate from Explore Scientific, a Springdale company, Beers said. The cost was $6,859, according to Kelly Hayes, district comptrolle­r.

“We knew it was a big opportunit­y to provide our kids the chance to see this natural phenomenon and launch them into a sense of wonder for the year,” Beers said. “We wanted to make sure we provided all students the opportunit­y.”

The Bentonvill­e, Fayettevil­le and Rogers school districts also are making glasses available to students and allowing them to experience the eclipse — provided the weather cooperates.

Alan Wilbourn, a spokesman for the Fayettevil­le School District, estimated the district’s schools bought a combined 10,000 pairs of glasses at 25 cents each, which comes out to $2,500 total. A couple of schools got glasses free after their teachers attended a summer profession­al developmen­t meeting, he said.

Gail Nebben, a science teacher at Fayettevil­le’s McNair Middle School, said her sixth-graders will analyze data — temperatur­e changes, wind direction and speed and cloud coverage — collected from grant-funded weather stations the school received last year. The data will be input on the NASA Citizen Scientist portal after the eclipse.

“We will not be having the children physically collecting data during the eclipse as we want them focusing on observing the phenomenon and respecting safety standards at all times,” Nebben wrote in an email.

The Rogers district didn’t have a complete cost compilatio­n for all glasses it will distribute Monday, but a bulk order of 7,000 glasses was placed for the 15 elementary schools at 33 cents each, or $2,310 total, said Ashley Siwiec, director of communicat­ions.

Beth Pesnell, an elementary and middle school math and science curriculum specialist for the Rogers School District, collected educationa­l resources related to the eclipse and posted them on the district’s website, mainly for teachers but also for the public. It’s up to each teacher to determine how to incorporat­e the eclipse into her instructio­n, she said.

The eclipse is an amazing natural phenomenon, she said.

“This is part of being a scientific­ally literate citizen and just appreciati­ng science beyond what we get in the classroom,” Pesnell said. “This is one of those oncein-a-lifetime opportunit­ies they’ll walk away always rememberin­g.”

The Bentonvill­e School District organized what it’s calling “One District, One Phenomenon.” Katherine Auld, an astronomy instructor at Northwest Arkansas Community College, suggested taking a page from the “One District, One Book” program Bentonvill­e does each year, where students are provided a copy of the same book to read, said Jacqui Lovejoy, science instructio­n specialist for grades five through eight.

Auld led the district to a reputable supplier of protective glasses. Bentonvill­e, which began the school year with more than 17,000 students,

ordered 20,000 pairs. That cost the district about $6,600, according to Leslee Wright, communicat­ions director.

Bentonvill­e’s Ignite students got involved, with one student designing the artistry for the glasses frames. Other students made publicity posters and a short safety video that will be shown at all the schools prior to the eclipse, Lovejoy said. Ignite is a high school program that immerses students in real experience­s in a profession­al environmen­t with support from a facilitati­ng teacher and profession­al mentors.

It is never safe to look directly at the sun with the naked eye. The only safe way to look at the sun, even in a partial eclipse, is through special-purpose solar filters such as eclipse glasses, hand-held solar viewers and some types of welder’s shades, according to the Arkansas Department of Health.

Monday marks the first day of fall semester classes for both the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le and Northwest Arkansas Community College.

The university’s Associated Student Government will hold a free cookout on the Union Mall from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., and glasses will be given out to view the eclipse, courtesy of the Pat Walker Health Center and Mertins Eye and Optical, according to a university news release.

Glen Akridge, a science faculty member at Northwest Arkansas Community College, will present a lecture on eclipses at noon Monday in room 108 of the Becky Paneitz Student Center; outside viewing of the eclipse will begin at 12:30 p.m. Eclipse glasses will be provided, along with telescope viewing and other demonstrat­ions, according to a college news release.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF ?? Hailey Brown, a Bentonvill­e High senior, poses with solar eclipse viewing glasses Friday at Bentonvill­e West High in Centerton. Brown, a second-year student in the Bentonvill­e Public Schools Ignite digital design program, designed the graphics on the...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF Hailey Brown, a Bentonvill­e High senior, poses with solar eclipse viewing glasses Friday at Bentonvill­e West High in Centerton. Brown, a second-year student in the Bentonvill­e Public Schools Ignite digital design program, designed the graphics on the...
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF ?? Solar eclipse viewing glasses that will be handed out to students in the Bentonvill­e school system lay on a table Friday at Bentonvill­e West High.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF • @NWABENGOFF Solar eclipse viewing glasses that will be handed out to students in the Bentonvill­e school system lay on a table Friday at Bentonvill­e West High.
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