Students take in a lesson at the Williamsville North High School planetarium in Williamsville, N.Y., on March 18, 2024, in preparation for the upcoming total solar eclipse. Teachers in or near the path of totality say they have worked to come up with educational and engaging lessons for the rare event. (AP Photo/Carolyn Thompson)
Students take in a lesson at the Williamsville North High School planetarium in Williamsville, N.Y., on March 18, 2024, in preparation for the upcoming total solar eclipse. Teachers in or near the path of totality say they have worked to come up with educational and engaging lessons for the rare event. (AP Photo/Carolyn Thompson)
CLEVELAND (AP) 鈥 Seventh-grade student Henry Cohen bounced side to side in time to the Beatles鈥 鈥淗ere Comes the Sun鈥 playing in teacher Nancy Morris鈥 classroom, swinging his arms open and closed across the planets pictured on his T-shirt.
Henry and other classmates at Cleveland's Riverside School were on their feet, dancing during a session of activities tied to April's . Second-graders invited in for the lessons sat cross-legged on the floor, laughing as they modeled newly decorated eclipse viewing glasses. Dioramas with softball-sized model earths and moons and flashlight 鈥渟uns鈥 occupied desks and shelves around the room.
Henry said his shirt reflected his love of space, which he called 鈥渁 cool mystery.鈥 The eclipse, he said, 鈥渋s a one in a million chance and I鈥檓 glad I get to be here for it.鈥
For schools in or near of the April 8 eclipse, the event has inspired lessons in science, literacy and culture. Some schools also are organizing group viewings for students to and learn about the astronomy behind it together.
A hair out of the path of totality, the school system in Portville, New York, near the Pennsylvania line, plans to load its 500 seventh- through 12th-grade students onto buses and drive about 15 minutes into the path, to an old horse barn overlooking a valley. There, they will be able to as it arrives around 3:20 p.m. EDT.
It required rearranging the hours of the school day to remain in session, but Superintendent Thomas Simon said staff did not want to miss out on the learning opportunity, especially at a time when when students experience so much of life through screens.
鈥淲e want them to leave here that day feeling they鈥檙e a very small part of a pretty magnificent planet that we live on, and world that we live in, and that there鈥檚 some real amazing things that we can experience in the natural world,鈥 Simon said.
Schools in Cleveland and some other cities in the eclipse's path will be closed that day so that students aren鈥檛 stuck on buses or in crowds of people expected to converge. At Riverside, Morris came up with a mix of crafts, games and models to educate and engage her students ahead of time.
鈥淭hey really were not realizing what a big deal this was until we really started talking about it," Morris said.
Learning about is built into every state鈥檚 science standards, said Dennis Schatz, past president of the National 国产诱惑福利 Teaching Association. Some school systems have their own planetariums 鈥 relics of the 1960s space race 鈥 where students can take in educational shows about astronomy.
But there is no better lesson than the real thing, said Schatz, who encourages educators to use the eclipse as "a teachable moment.鈥
Dallas science teachers Anita Orozco and Katherine Roberts plan to do just that at the Lamplighter School, arranging for the entire pre-K- through fourth-grade student body to watch it together outdoors. The teachers spent a Saturday in March at a teaching workshop at the University of Texas at Dallas where they were told it would be 鈥渁lmost criminal鈥 to keep students inside.
鈥淲e want our students to love science as much as we do," Roberts said, "and we just want them understanding and also having the awe of how crazy this event is.鈥
Wrangling young children may be a challenge, Orozco said, but 鈥渨e want it to be an event."
In training future science teachers, University at Buffalo professor Noemi Waight has encouraged her student teachers to incorporate how culture shapes the way people experience an eclipse. Native Americans, for example, may view the total eclipse as , she said.
鈥淭his is important for our teachers to understand,鈥 she said, 鈥渟o when they鈥檙e teaching, they can address all of these elements.鈥
The STEM Friends Club from the State University of New York Brockport planned eclipse-related activities with fourth-grade students at teacher Christopher Albrecht鈥檚 class, hoping to pass along their passion for science, technology, engineering and math to younger students.
鈥淚 want to show students what is possible,鈥 said Allison Blum, 20, a physics major focused on astrophysics. 鈥淵ou know those big mainstream jobs, like astronaut, but you don鈥檛 really know what鈥檚 possible with the different fields.鈥
Albrecht sees his fourth-grade students' interest in the eclipse as a chance to incorporate literacy into lessons, too 鈥 maybe even spark a love of reading.
鈥淭his is is a great opportunity to read a lot with them,鈥 Albrecht said. He has picked 鈥淲hat Is a Solar Eclipse?鈥 by Dana Meachen Rau and 鈥滱 Few Beautiful Minutes鈥 by Kate Allen Fox for his class at Hill Elementary School in Brockport, New York.
鈥淚t鈥檚 capturing their interest," he said, "and at the same time, their imagination, too.鈥
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Associated Press writer Patrick Orsagos contributed to this report.