U.W. Astronomy
Project AstroBio


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Currently not recruiting
(please see bottom of page).

Creating partnerships between grade 3-12 teachers and amateur and professional scientists...Project ASTRO/Seattle becomes Project AstroBio

Project Astro has long enhanced science and astronomy education by fostering ongoing partnerships between teachers and astronomers, astronomy clubs, universities, observatories and planetaria. Here in Seattle, since 2002 we have changed Project Astro into Project AstroBio, an amalgamation of "classic" Project Astro with a new component that incorporates teaching about astrobiology, the study of life in extreme environments and the possibility of life on other bodies in our and other planetary systems.

Over the course of the school year, each scientist visits his/her class at least five times and develops an ongoing relationship with the students in addition to assisting the teacher and/or leading astronomy, earth science, or astrobiology activities. These activities may include hands-on science, question-and-answer sessions, evening star parties for students and their families, or large class projects such as biology "growing" experiments, building a telescope or building a school sundial. Project AstroBio currently has 42 partnerships representing about 1900 students in participating schools throughout the Puget Sound region.

Although based at the University of Washington, Project AstroBio is substantially aided by its consortium, with representatives from the Pacific Science Center, the Museum of Flight, the UW Astronomy Department, the Seattle Astronomical Society, the Everett Astronomical Society, the Boeing Employees Astronomical Society, the Washington State NASA Space Grant Office, local school districts, community colleges, and teachers.

The Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) in San Francisco founded Project ASTRO in 1993 with a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). In 1997, UW Astronomy Professor Woodruff Sullivan received a NSF grant to start Project Astro in Seattle. There are a total of eleven Project Astro sites and one Project AstroBio site across the country. In our first five years, we have had a direct impact on 150 teachers and almost 4700 students in the Puget Sound region.

The UW Astrobiology Program has been developing and growing in many ways since its inception in 1998, with funding for graduate students and research. The faculty pool now includes 28 members of 11 different science departments; 23 graduate students in 7 of those departments, 4 post-doctoral researchers, and 2 full-time staff members. UW is now a member of the prestigious NASA Astrobiology Institute, headquartered at Ames Research Center in California. UW researchers are among the top echelon of astrobiologists worldwide, and are producing the first graduate textbook in Astrobiology.

Teacher and science partners:

  • attend a mandatory two-day professional development training workshop to learn hands-on pedagogy
  • receive 700-page + 400-page curriculum guides
  • receive exemplary classroom resource materials for hands-on activities
  • develop strategies for working together in and out of the classroom
  • network with fellow teachers/astronomers
  • obtain information about other learning opportunities in the region

Project AstroBio also hosts educational events throughout the school year. Many of these events are sponsored by our consortium of institutions, school districts, and individuals who are committed to improving science education.



  Additional events throughout the year include:
 
  • Museum of Flight workshops
  • Pacific Science Center events
  • University of Washington events
  • Astronomical Society Star Parties
  • Spring Networking and Evaluation Workshop-to share what you've done/learned

Click here for an annotated list of astrobiology activities!


Due to lack of funding, Project AstroBio is not currently recruiting new partnerships. We will resume if and when new funding is found. Please check back again.
html originally by Luis Mendoza