The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

School districts ready for near-total eclipse

Metro Atlanta districts plan events, will release kids late on Monday.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

It’s a historic learning opportunit­y, and educators are making plans to help students experience it from the safety of campus.

Think of Monday afternoon’s eclipse as the quiet before the storm.

Life will surely come to a standstill at 2:35 p.m. as Atlantans lift their gaze to observe the moon when it blocks nearly all of the sun.

Then, boom, it’ll be rush hour. And it’ll probably be a doozy, aggravated by late school buses pouring onto the streets.

Due to safety concerns — driving and releasing kids onto the streets in the dark, while drivers are distracted by a unique celestial experience — schools will be releasing students 15 minutes to an hour later, as the sun returns.

Also, of course, it’s a historic learning opportunit­y, and educators are making plans to help students experience it from the safety of campus.

Atlanta Public Schools, for instance, has taken 50,500 of those cardboard-and-film eclipse glasses off the market, ordering 50,000 and getting another 500 in a donation.

APS dodged the Amazon. com controvers­y that tripped up another metro Atlanta district. The Coweta County School System had to return the 24,000 eclipse glasses it had purchased from an online retailer over concerns about Amazon’s recall of the company’s product.

Atlanta schools science coordinato­r Rabieh Hafza said through a district spokeswoma­n that APS

purchased its glasses directly from Rainbow Symphony, one of three vendors recommende­d by NASA. (The other two are Thousand Oaks Optical and American Paper Optics, which set a goal last year to sell 100 million glasses for this eclipse.)

Atlanta, like other metro Atlanta districts, is compiling a grade-specific solar eclipse teacher’s manual, with background and safety informatio­n.

In Gwinnett County, the state’s largest school district, elementary school students will be tasked with determinin­g how the tiny moon can block the massive sun from view and why the duration of daylight changes throughout the year.

Some middle school students will make models of a solar and lunar eclipse, while peers in high school create time-lapse videos of the event.

In neighborin­g DeKalb County, where the school district is in the unusual position of owning a planetariu­m (with a new 4K Laser projection system), an observator­y and even a NASA Apollo space capsule, the expert staff is helping prepare teachers for the eclipse while also laying out telescopes for the adults who visit on the big day. (The kids will remain in their schools for the aforementi­oned safety reasons.)

Thursday afternoon at Fernbank, about 75 fourthgrad­e teachers watched a video presentati­on and got informatio­n packets about the eclipse.

The teachers will be able to explain to their students how scientists will be exploiting the eclipse for research.

“They’re important, science-wise,” said Doug Hrabe, the Fernbank Science Center director. “They’re not just cool to look at.”

For general informatio­n about the event, visit NASA’s solar eclipse website at eclipse201­7.nasa.gov/andajc.com.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? April Whitt, a teacher at Fernbank Science Center, gives a presentati­on to DeKalb County teachers about the coming solar eclipse in the planetariu­m at Fernbank Science Center on Thursday. About 80 fourthgrad­e teachers learned about physics and safety...
HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM April Whitt, a teacher at Fernbank Science Center, gives a presentati­on to DeKalb County teachers about the coming solar eclipse in the planetariu­m at Fernbank Science Center on Thursday. About 80 fourthgrad­e teachers learned about physics and safety...
 ??  ?? April Whitt (center) chats with fellow teachers after her presentati­on at Fernbank Science Center on Thursday.
April Whitt (center) chats with fellow teachers after her presentati­on at Fernbank Science Center on Thursday.
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