CitSci.org “Feature Friday” Webinar on 3/7/14: Viewing Data: Observation list and Map

This is a citizen science webinar opportunity from CitSci.org. Greetings from CitSci.org! Please join us for our sixth “Feature Friday” webinar. These webinars invite you to offer your ideas and thoughts about improvements to CitSci.org. The first Friday of each month these webinars will focus on a specific topic / feature of CitSci.org. We will demonstrate how to … Read more “CitSci.org “Feature Friday” Webinar on 3/7/14: Viewing Data: Observation list and Map”

Categories: Citizen Science, Events

Citizen Science on the Radio: WHYY features Old Weather from Zooniverse

This week on The Pulse and SciStarter’s segment about citizen science, producer Kimberly Haas takes a look at Zooniverse’s Old Weather, a project that dives into weather’s past in order to study our climate’s future. Old Weather is a Zooniverse project that dives into historical archives of weather observations. Citizen scientists can browse through online archival data of … Read more “Citizen Science on the Radio: WHYY features Old Weather from Zooniverse”

Categories: Citizen Science, Climate & Weather

Citizen Science in the Classroom Series: Phytoplankton Monitoring Network

Citizen Science in the Classroom and the Phytoplankton Monitoring Network     NOAA National Ocean Service Phytoplankton Monitoring Network Citizen Science Project to Meet Common Core and Next Generation Teaching Standards Grades: 1st-12th (*see notes below about elementary grades) Description: The Phytoplankton Monitoring Network (PMN) is hosted through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA). … Read more “Citizen Science in the Classroom Series: Phytoplankton Monitoring Network”

Categories: Analyzing and interpreting data, Asking questions (for science) and defining problems (for engineering), Citizen Science, Constructing explanations (for science) and designing solutions (for engineering), Developing and using models, Engaging in argument from evidence, Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information, Ocean & Water, Planning and carrying out investigations, Science Practices, Using mathematics and computational thinking

Why Did the Salamander Cross the Road?

Count and protect migrating amphibians. Help salamanders cross the road at night with the Salamander Crossing Brigades. Citizen science after hours…here are some citizen science projects you can do at night. Springtime means that love is in the air. Bees are buzzing, birds are chirping,  animals are mating–and salamanders want to do it too. That is, if … Read more “Why Did the Salamander Cross the Road?”

Categories: Animals, Biology, Citizen Science, Events, Nature & Outdoors

Getting flashed by the Moon?

Monitor the rates and sizes of meteoroids striking the moon with the Lunar Impact Monitoring project. Citizen science after hours…here are some citizen science projects you can do at night. By now you’ve probably seen Gravity, and maybe you figured real astronauts don’t have to worry about projectiles, flying debris, or explosions. After all, the stars … Read more “Getting flashed by the Moon?”

Categories: Astronomy & Space, Citizen Science, Geology & Earth Sciences

Dark Sky Meter: Milky What?

Measuring “skyglow” and understanding light pollution with the Dark Sky Meter Citizen science after hours…here are some citizen science projects you can do at night. See also our recent feature of Dark Sky Meter. If you have ever seen a satellite photo of the eastern seaboard of the United States, taken at night, you will understand … Read more “Dark Sky Meter: Milky What?”

Categories: Citizen Science

Loss of the Night: Stargazing and Citizen Science

Contribute to light pollution research with the Loss of the Night Android app! Citizen science after hours…here are some citizen science projects you can do at night. I’m going to take a quick bet and guess that every one who is reading this post has at least once gazed up at a clear sky and … Read more “Loss of the Night: Stargazing and Citizen Science”

Categories: Astronomy & Space, Citizen Science, Nature & Outdoors

The Citizen Cyberscience Summit: Science for all, and all for science

A synopsis of and key takeaways from the Citizen Cyberscience Summit 2014 in London As some of you may already know, SciStarter presented at the Citizen Cyberscience Summit in London this past weekend (2/20 to 2/22). In a nutshell, the conference was a place where a multitude of organizations and groups could convene to discuss … Read more “The Citizen Cyberscience Summit: Science for all, and all for science”

Categories: Citizen Science, hackfest