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Museum Classroom Programs and Tours
Museum Classroom Programs & Tours
Bring your students to the Museum Classroom for a program that encourages critical thinking. Investigate essential science questions. Analyze historical policy decisions since World War II. All activities follow the requirements of the New Mexico Science, Social Studies, and Language Arts Standards.
Click here for a pdf of the 2009-2010 Education Guide: EducationGuide.pdf
Click here for the online reservation form to book a program: Reservation Form
Energy Adventures with Little Albert Einstein (Grades K-5)
What is energy? Is it like matter? Where do we use energy at home and school? How can we use natural resources like heat, light and wind to do work? How do we make and use electrical energy? How is energy stored?
Students can experience the static shock of a Van de Graff Generator, build a human battery, create lighted circuits or telegraphs, cook in a solar oven, see the effects of a plasma ball on fluorescent lights, test electromagnets, or make ice cream without a freezer. Each grade level will do different activities and experiment with various forms of energy. Students will see how energy changes from one form to another form, how energy reacts with matter, and how energy moves in waves.
Journey to the Sun-Flying Machines & Rockets (Grades K-5)
How do planets move? What is the “man in the moon”? Why is the moon that shape? Is that light in the sky a planet or a star? How far away is that star? What makes weather happen? Why is Albuquerque the Hot Air Balloon Capital of the World? How can I change launch angle to reach a target with a rocket?
Students can use inflatable planets and solar system models to see the motion of the sun, moon, Earth and other planets, use a solar telescope, determine the distance of far away objects, or study the components that cause weather including air pressure, density and temperature. Older students will plot the effect of force and launch angle on the path of a rocket. Each grade level will do different activities related to astronomy, weather and rocketry.
Physics and Forces with Little Albert Einstein(Grades K-5)
How strong is a magnet? What happens in a vacuum chamber when you remove the force of air pressure? How does gravity affect the flight of a rocket? Can a penny and a feather fall to the ground at the same speed?
Students can test the force of air using a Bernoulli blower, race in a maze controlled by magnets, squeeze a Cartesian diver, or design a rocket to reach a target. Each grade level will do activities and experiment with the forces of magnetism, air pressure, and gravity. Students will learn about how these forces affect matter on Earth and can even be used to create electricity.
Taste of Science (Grades K-5)
Challenge your students’ minds through demonstrations of energy and physical forces including electricity, the magic of magnets, and radiation in the world around them. This popular program combines hands-on activities that stimulate interest in the wonders of science from all of our museum programs. Students will participate in activities and demonstrations with a vacuum pump, Van de Graaff generator, plasma ball, magnetic field, or Geiger counter in an amazing hour of science on stage.
Big Deal: The Small World of Nano (Grades 6-8 OR 9- 12)
Scientists all over the world are thinking big ideas by thinking small. Introduce your students to recent developments regarding nano-technology applications in electrical engineering, materials science, and chemistry. Students will work with models to understand the properties of those nano particles that are a billion times smaller than the eye can see. They will examine and compare the nano-prefix to other metric units of measure and relate the properties of nano materials to their structure.
Our Radioactive World (Grades 6-8 OR 9-12)
Do we glow in the dark? What do superheroes have to do with radiation? What is nuclear decay? How can radiation help find the age of a dinosaur? Why is nuclear medicine one of the hottest career fields of our time? How are the reactions on the sun different from nuclear decay? These and many other questions are explored.
Students will determine the half-life of an imaginary isotope, observe alpha tracks in a cloud chamber, or use a Geiger counter to show the relationship between distance, time, or shielding to radiation. Each grade level will perform activities to study the meaning of radioactive decay, how to detect nuclear radiation, how scientists use nuclear decay to find the age of old fossils, and the common sources of radiation in the world around us.
Decision to Drop: U.S. History (Grades 7-12)
This program involves students in a critical problem-solving exercise. Students will weigh the pros and cons of the decision to drop the atomic bombs on Japan based on primary sources and the viewpoints of several historical figures. Students will engage in role-playing activities based on the original participants’ decision to drop the bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Activities are designed for either middle school or high school students. Students viewing the presentation at the museum will enrich their experience by touring the exhibits.
Secrets and Spies: New Mexico History & the Manhattan Project (Grades 7-12)
Secrecy, espionage, and science all proved critical in the race for the atomic bomb. Transport your students back to Los Alamos in the 1940s and the heart of the Manhattan Project. Let them experience for themselves the secrets and the spies who stole them. This program uses primary source material. Activities are designed for either middle school or high school students. Students viewing the presentation at the museum will enrich their experience by touring the exhibits.
Museum Tours
Bring your students to the Museum and allow them to discover each exhibit through a docent-guided formal tour, or accompany your students on a self-guided tour. Another possibility is to send your students to the Museum for an enrichment project using worksheets we provide to help guide them.
The Museum exhibits include interests in three areas: Science, History and Technology:
Science:
Little Albert’s Lab
The future belongs to the children of today. In Little Albert’s Lab children of all ages can play and learn the concepts of physics, considered by many to be the basis of all sciences.
Periodic Hall
Marvel at the granite Periodic Table of the Elements in the floor of the foyer. Check your memory of symbols and atomic weights.
Pioneers of the Atom
Step back in time to meet the individuals who questioned and defined the matter which makes up the universe. Use the interactive kiosk to trace the study of the atom from the early Greeks through Dalton and Rutherford to the world of Albert Einstein and E=mc2.
Radiation 101
View sources of radiation including many household items that are naturally radioactive. Use the interactive kiosk to estimate your personal radiation dose and compare the alpha, beta, and gamma radiation detected by an operating Geiger Counter. Explore a variety of radiation detectors, the precursors to modern dosimeters used by nuclear scientists today.
X is for X-Ray / Nuclear Medicine
Trace the development of early X-rays through modern imaging techniques. Learn how X-rays differ from the images created using radioactive isotopes to view internal organs like your heart or lungs.
History:
Decision to Drop / Manhattan Project
The dawn of the Atomic Age began with the design and testing of the world’s first atomic bomb during the Manhattan Project. Peek into the daily lives of the scientists who lived at Los Alamos and journey with them to the Trinity site where the first explosion occurred in 1945.
Cold War
In this exhibit, visitors will explore the continuing political conflict existing after WWII. See an extensive collection of military weapons developed in the era.
Atomic Pop Culture
Every visitor will be entertained while viewing how American popular culture reflected the dawning of the Atomic Age!
Civil Defense Fallout Shelter
Watch a live television broadcast in a fallout shelter re-created for this exhibit. Check your emergency supply list with the items Americans collected to equip a family fallout shelter in the 1950s.
Heritage Park
Complete with planes, rockets, missiles, cannons and nuclear submarine sail, this exhibit will attract plane buffs and historians alike.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
While the atomic bomb brought the war to a close, the after-effects of the bomb were felt for years in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Technology:
Energy Encounters
Decide for yourself whether our energy hungry world can continue to survive on fossil fuels. Examine the options of green energy alternatives like solar and wind power along with the place nuclear power has in the world today. Explore the functions of a nuclear power plant, the use of nuclear power in a merchant marine ship, and the safety precautions we take to prevent nuclear accidents in the United States. Interactive programs are available throughout.
The Uranium Cycle
The uranium ore cart in this exhibit is just the beginning of the fuel cycle for uranium. Learn about the steps in the process required to change uranium into a useable form for nuclear power plants or weapons. End the cycle with options for the disposal and recycling of uranium fuel.
Prices
Self-guided Tours: $5.00 per student, 15 student minimum per group
Free admission for all chaperones; ratio of 6 students per chaperone required
Docent-guided Tours or Classroom Program: $6.00 per student, 15 student minimum per group
Free admission for all chaperones; ratio of 6 students per chaperone required
Docent-guided Tours and Classroom Program: $7.00 per student, 15 student minimum per group
Free admission for all chaperones; ratio of 6 students per chaperone required
For Teachers
Choose from museum classroom programs, tours, outreach at your site or professional development.
Read More »
Science is Everywhere Summer Camp
Kids have so many questions about the world – down to even the smallest parts. We’re here to answer them with fun, creative activities that will also nourish their imaginations and - who knows – maybe even foster a career in science or medicine. Read More »
