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Physics and liberal studies Professor David Mitchell led a team of aspiring educators on a journey to develop curriculum designed to inspire young students to be curious about our galaxy.
The team of four undergraduates assembled a receiver and two antennas capable of listening to radio waves from both Jupiter and the sun. The future teachers plan to apply what they learned to develop a curriculum for local elementary school students at San Benito Elementary School in Atascadero.
Students Featured: Aileen Saucedo, Carly Muller, Sara Bettencourt, and Sarah Coyle.
To read this story and support public higher education visit: www.cosam.calpoly.edu
One of recipes that ties into the Five in a Row (FIAR) book "Another Celebrated Dancing Bear." It turned out very well.
A nun explores the surprising effects of atmospheric pressure. Working with the nonprofit organization Science for Monks and Nuns, physics Professor Stamatis Vokos taught an enthusiastic group of beginning science students in Trashigang, Bhutan — Buddhist monastics from the Rangjung Monastery and other monasteries in the area.
Manufacturing Engineering student Brian Hillenbrand works on a HAAS milling machine. He is a Student Lab Tech for the IME Department.
The Molecular Sciences Software Institute (MolSSI) hosted a scientific programming workshop for Frost Summer Research Fellows at the Warren J. Baker Center for Science and Mathematics Thursday, June 27, 2019. The 64-seat Python coding workshop is a one-day course that offers students coding techniques that assist in data analysis in disciplines such as molecular science, physics, and applied mathematics.
Cal Poly's College of Science and Mathematics is where science, mathematics, the art of teaching and California's Central Coast intersect.
The Molecular Sciences Software Institute serves as a nexus for science, education, and cooperation serving the worldwide community of computational molecular scientists – a broad field including of biomolecular simulation, quantum chemistry, and materials science.
#CalPolyNow #CPFrostResearch #UndergraduateResearch
Physics and liberal studies Professor David Mitchell led a team of aspiring educators on a journey to develop curriculum designed to inspire young students to be curious about our galaxy.
The team of four undergraduates assembled a receiver and two antennas capable of listening to radio waves from both Jupiter and the sun. The future teachers plan to apply what they learned to develop a curriculum for local elementary school students at San Benito Elementary School in Atascadero.
Students Featured: Aileen Saucedo, Carly Muller, Sara Bettencourt, and Sarah Coyle.
To read this story and support public higher education visit: www.cosam.calpoly.edu
Physics and liberal studies Professor David Mitchell led a team of aspiring educators on a journey to develop curriculum designed to inspire young students to be curious about our galaxy.
The team of four undergraduates assembled a receiver and two antennas capable of listening to radio waves from both Jupiter and the sun. The future teachers plan to apply what they learned to develop a curriculum for local elementary school students at San Benito Elementary School in Atascadero.
Students Featured: Aileen Saucedo, Carly Muller, Sara Bettencourt, and Sarah Coyle.
To read this story and support public higher education visit: www.cosam.calpoly.edu
The Molecular Sciences Software Institute (MolSSI) hosted a scientific programming workshop for Frost Summer Research Fellows at the Warren J. Baker Center for Science and Mathematics Thursday, June 27, 2019. The 64-seat Python coding workshop is a one-day course that offers students coding techniques that assist in data analysis in disciplines such as molecular science, physics, and applied mathematics.
Cal Poly's College of Science and Mathematics is where science, mathematics, the art of teaching and California's Central Coast intersect.
The Molecular Sciences Software Institute serves as a nexus for science, education, and cooperation serving the worldwide community of computational molecular scientists – a broad field including of biomolecular simulation, quantum chemistry, and materials science.
#CalPolyNow #CPFrostResearch #UndergraduateResearch
Physics and liberal studies Professor David Mitchell led a team of aspiring educators on a journey to develop curriculum designed to inspire young students to be curious about our galaxy.
The team of four undergraduates assembled a receiver and two antennas capable of listening to radio waves from both Jupiter and the sun. The future teachers plan to apply what they learned to develop a curriculum for local elementary school students at San Benito Elementary School in Atascadero.
Students Featured: Aileen Saucedo, Carly Muller, Sara Bettencourt, and Sarah Coyle.
To read this story and support public higher education visit: www.cosam.calpoly.edu
Manufacturing Engineering student Brian Hillenbrand works on a HAAS milling machine. He is a Student Lab Tech for the IME Department.
Physics and liberal studies Professor David Mitchell led a team of aspiring educators on a journey to develop curriculum designed to inspire young students to be curious about our galaxy.
The team of four undergraduates assembled a receiver and two antennas capable of listening to radio waves from both Jupiter and the sun. The future teachers plan to apply what they learned to develop a curriculum for local elementary school students at San Benito Elementary School in Atascadero.
Students Featured: Aileen Saucedo, Carly Muller, Sara Bettencourt, and Sarah Coyle.
To read this story and support public higher education visit: www.cosam.calpoly.edu
Working with the nonprofit organization Science for Monks and Nuns, physics Professor Stamatis Vokos taught an enthusiastic group of beginning science students in Trashigang, Bhutan — Buddhist monastics from the Rangjung Monastery and other monasteries in the area.
A battery, a thin wire and a cheap magnet
can create an impressive electric motor. Working with the nonprofit organization Science for Monks and Nuns, physics Professor Stamatis Vokos taught an enthusiastic group of beginning science students in Trashigang, Bhutan — Buddhist monastics from the Rangjung Monastery and other monasteries in the area.
AERO Hanger — Student Tech Toby Shirts (ME), left, talks with Xander Luciano (Manufacturing Engineering) and Megan Johnson (Business) in the Hangar shop.
The 2019 Student Research Conference gives students the opprotnity to present their research to faculty and peers during poster sessions and oral presentations.
Light traveling in straight lines produces an inverted image through a pinhole. Working with the nonprofit organization Science for Monks and Nuns, physics Professor Stamatis Vokos taught an enthusiastic group of beginning science students in Trashigang, Bhutan — Buddhist monastics from the Rangjung Monastery and other monasteries in the area.