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  • Monday, September 20

    • 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
    • I Can Change the World: Citizen Science in the Classroom (map)
    • NC Center for the Advancement of Teaching, Cullowhee
    • Even if you don’t consider yourself a “science type,” you and your students can engage in meaningful and exciting studies that will enhance your understanding of the natural world. Cross-curricular citizen science programs allow students to collect and share scientific data with the global scientific community. Teachers have long recognized that students are more engaged in their learning when they are directly involved with topics that are relevant to their lives. Join faculty from NCCAT and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in hands-on field experiences. Explore seasonally appropriate citizen science themes. Tag migrating Monarch butterflies. Band birds on a mountaintop. Delve into the streams and forests of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Caution: Students contributing to these studies may experience increased civic engagement and scientific literacy, as well as honed observation skills, and enhanced abilities in reading, writing, mathematics, and technology.

      Multi-day workshop; September 19-23

    • Cost: No cost to teachers or school systems. Meals, lodging, materials, and substitute reimbursement provided.
    • Class/Workshop: Science Professionals, Other
    • 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
    • The Landscape of Democracy: Our National Parks (map)
    • NC Center for the Advancement of Teaching, Ocracoke
    • Our nearly 400 national parks offer opportunities for our students to investigate the biology, geology, and culture of important national sites. Join us on the Outer Banks as we learn about “America’s Best Idea” and how the National Park Service is honoring and documenting our history, conserving our natural resources, and helping our communities preserve their own history and environment. Learn about efforts to expand and reach into almost every one of our country’s 3,141 counties. We will explore the Cape Hatteras and Cape Lookout National Seashores to examine the natural and human history of its marshes, beaches, and maritime forests, as well as its lighthouses, shipwrecks, and important historical events. Inspire the next generation of scientists, thinkers, and conservationists. Discover how many of our national parks, having borrowed from the best practices of effective educators, are revamping their programs to include more opportunities for experiential learning. See how the unique formulation of the national parks in the United States reflects and reinforces the idea that our best and most important places should be available and maintained for all, rather than exploited or reserved for a fortunate few. This seminar requires a moderate level of fitness.

      Multi-day workshop; September 19-23

    • Cost: No cost to teachers or school systems. Meals, lodging, materials, and substitute reimbursement provided.
    • Class/Workshop: Science Professionals, Other
    • 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
    • The Science and Art of Wine making (map)
    • Shelton Vineyards, Dobson
    • Tour a state-of-the-art working winery and learn about the art and science of wine making in North Carolina. Tour will end with a tasting of 5 wines (must be 21 years of age to sample) and participants will receive a souvenir glass. Tours start every thirty minutes from 10 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. daily.

    • Cost: $5.00 per person
    • Hands-On Activity, Tour/Open House: General Audiences
    • 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
    • Nature Watchers: Rockin Roly Pollies (map)
    • Historic Yates Mill County Park, Raleigh
    • Check out these fun rockin’ critters. Watch how they roll into a ball and race through a maze. They will make you laugh. See if you can roll like a roly poly? Pre-registration is required.

      For pre-school children ages 3 – 5 with accompanying adult(s) – discover the natural world through stories, hands-on nature activities, games, crafts, and outdoor exploration.

      This program is new to Historic Yates Mill County Park but it has been taught for years at Crowder District Park with great success. The same staff teaches the Nature Watcher programs at both parks.

    • Cost: $4.00/child per program
    • Hands-On Activity, Class/Workshop: Families, Other
    • 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
    • Storytime (map)
    • NC Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh
    • Spend quiet time listening to your favorite nature tales and meet live animals.

      From alligators to opossums, come face-to-face with a new live animal each week.

    • This event is free to participants.
    • Science Talk/Lecture, Other: Families, College Students, Science Professionals, General Audiences
    • 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
    • A World Apart (map)
    • Discovery Place, Charlotte
    • Learn about the tropical rainforest ecosystem and the species that call it home during “A World Apart”.

      Get acquainted with a variety of species that call the rainforest habitat home and explore the unique features that help them thrive in this one-of-a-kind environment. Keep your eye out for the ball python, a constrictor that uses its 200 vertebra to twist and turn around the rainforest exhibit. You also could meet an iguana hailing from Central and South America that uses its third eye to sense the presence of predators – and friendly Museum visitors.

      Step in to a world where the seasons change from hot to hotter, frogs roam freely and a 20-year old blue and gold macaw looks on as you experience the wonders of the tropical rainforest.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences, Other
    • 11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
    • Meet the Animals (map)
    • NC Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh
    • From alligators to opossums, come face-to-face with a new live animal each week.

      Upcoming Topics

      Sept. 11: Insects & Arthropods

      Sept. 12: Turtles
      Sept. 13: What do I eat?
      Sept. 14-17: Nocturnal Animals
      Sept. 18-19: Turtles
      Sept. 20-24: Alligators
      Sept. 25-26: Turtles

    • This event is free to participants.
    • Hands-On Activity, Science Talk/Lecture, Other: Families, College Students, Science Professionals, General Audiences
    • 11:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
    • SciWorks Planetarium Shows (map)
    • SciWorks Science Center, Winston-Salem
    • SciWorks planetarium offers several shows throughout the day for various age groups. We also present a live sky tour of the current night sky. Shows and times vary daily so please call ahead. First show at 11:00 a.m. Last show at 3:00 p.m. Several shows daily.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Other: Families, General Audiences
    • 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
    • Meet the Animals (map)
    • NC Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh
    • From alligators to opossums, come face-to-face with a new live animal each week.

      Upcoming Topics

      Sept. 11: Insects & Arthropods

      Sept. 12: Turtles
      Sept. 13: What do I eat?
      Sept. 14-17: Nocturnal Animals
      Sept. 18-19: Turtles
      Sept. 20-24: Alligators
      Sept. 25-26: Turtles

    • This event is free to participants.
    • Hands-On Activity, Science Talk/Lecture, Other: Families, College Students, Science Professionals, General Audiences
    • 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
    • Live Animal Encounter (map)
    • North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island, Manteo
    • Come face to face with alligators, snakes, sea turtles and many other live animals in Neptune’s Theater. This program is featured everyday at 11:30 a.m.

    • This event is free to participants.
    • Demonstration, Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences
    • 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
    • Live Animal Encounters (map)
    • SciWorks Science Center, Winston-Salem
    • Meet some of SciWorks’ program animals at this informal presentation. We will introduce a new animal each day. There will be time for questions at the end.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Hands-On Activity, Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences
    • 1:30 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
    • Seminar with Ira Flatow of NPR’s Science Friday (map)
    • Levine Science Research Center, Durham
    • “Talking Science to a Science-Challenged Public”

      Join us for a seminar with Ira Flatow of NPR’s Science Friday. Tickets are available through the Duke box office beginning August 30. Tickets are free and can be ordered online at www.tickets.duke.edu. To be held at Love Auditorium in the Levine Science Reserach Center at Duke University.

    • Cost: Tickets are free from the University Box office http://tickets.duke.edu/load_screen.asp?screen=contactus in late August (first-come, first-served).
    • Science Talk/Lecture: Science Professionals, General Audiences
    • 2:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
    • What’s Glowing On? (map)
    • Discovery Place, Charlotte
    • Grab a seat at “The Stage” and discover the science behind luminescent and incandescent light. By the time the show is over, you’ll be an expert on all that shines.

      Put yourself in the spotlight as a contestant in the “Will it Glow?” game show, hosted by one of the Museum’s brightest scientists. Explore the materials that make things glow and take a closer look at items such as the artwork of Vincent Van ‘Glow’ to watch them shine. The show does ‘lights out’ with a BANG! — get a front row seat to the explosive qualities of light.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Class/Workshop, Demonstration, Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences, Other
    • 2:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
    • Science on a Sphere Program (map)
    • North Carolina Aquarium on Roanoke Island, Manteo
    • See the Earth like never before with an educational program on our three dimensional sphere at Oceans Revealed. Every day at 2:30 p.m.

    • Cost: Free with paid admission.
    • Demonstration, Science Talk/Lecture: Families, College Students, Science Professionals, General Audiences
    • 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
    • A World Apart (map)
    • Discovery Place, Charlotte
    • Learn about the tropical rainforest ecosystem and the species that call it home during “A World Apart”.

      Get acquainted with a variety of species that call the rainforest habitat home and explore the unique features that help them thrive in this one-of-a-kind environment. Keep your eye out for the ball python, a constrictor that uses its 200 vertebra to twist and turn around the rainforest exhibit. You also could meet an iguana hailing from Central and South America that uses its third eye to sense the presence of predators – and friendly Museum visitors.

      Step in to a world where the seasons change from hot to hotter, frogs roam freely and a 20-year old blue and gold macaw looks on as you experience the wonders of the tropical rainforest.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences, Other
    • 4:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.
    • Sub Zero (map)
    • Discovery Place, Charlotte
    • Join our resident physicist at the “The Stage” to chill out and explore a world below freezing. With materials so cold they can only be touched with cryogenic gloves, you’re in for an icy treat!

      The star of the show is liquid nitrogen – a unique element that’s so cold, when poured out of its tank in a room temperature setting; it turns to gas before even hitting the floor – giving you the chance to frolic in a nitrogen cloud. You’ll watch as it makes a surgical glove as delicate as glass, takes the bounce out of a bouncy ball and causes a penny to shatter with one strike of a hammer.

      Learn more frosty facts about this important element at “Sub Zero”.

    • Cost: Free with museum admission.
    • Class/Workshop, Demonstration, Science Talk/Lecture: Families, General Audiences, Other
    • 6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
    • ASU Physics Demo Show (map)
    • Appalachian State University, Boone
    • The ASU “Physics Demo Show” presents some interesting tools and tricks used by our department to illustrate the concepts covered in our Physics and Astronomy classes. These topics include: Light, Sound, Mechanics, Fluids, Electricity and Magnetism. Strobe lights and projectors will show color mixing. A tablecloth will be pulled from underneath a set of dishes. Simple instruments will be used to create different musical sounds. A ping pong ball will be launched from a cannon using atmospheric pressure. Finally, a soda can will be crushed using an electromagnet.

      Show to be held in ASU’s CAP Science Building, Room 108.

    • This event is free to participants.
    • Demonstration, Science Talk/Lecture: General Audiences
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