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Education Space

One Telescope Per Child 63

Posted by samzenpus
from the baby-wants-a-microscope-too dept.
An anonymous reader writes "It seems one-<object>-per-child goes beyond laptops. A project from the International Astronomical Union (IAU) has designed a high-quality, $20 telescope they're calling the Galileoscope, hoping to spark interest in astronomy among kids and make good scopes available to many who otherwise could not afford one. But as OLPC learned, it's not that easy; they are struggling to get enough volume to get production ramped up and costs down, resorting to tricks like auctioning off a few autographed ones, and trying Give-One-Get-One."
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Galileoscope: One Telescope Per Child

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  • by tylerni7 (944579) on Wednesday September 23 2009, @08:42PM (#29524163) Homepage
    An interesting benefit in living in poorer countries is that there is far less light pollution.
    Maybe they could make these even cheaper by making some of the optics smaller (reducing the aperture), since something good enough to see Saturn's rings in rural America should be far more capable in an area with almost zero light pollution, like rural Africa.
  • by PopeRatzo (965947) * on Wednesday September 23 2009, @10:38PM (#29524831) Homepage Journal

    I'm thinking One Pocketknife Per Child.

    Telescope? How many bags of rice can you trade a telescope for?

    Sometimes, I get the impression that these do-gooders have never left their own neighborhood.

  • by LordVader717 (888547) on Thursday September 24 2009, @06:07AM (#29526789)

    True. I would probably say though that Astronomy without a telescope is more interesting than with one. You can learn the constellations and see how the planets move across them. Or how meteor showers originate from the same patch of sky. Or viewing predicted transits or man-made satellites. With a telescope you try to concentrate too much on how good you see something rather than what you're seeing.

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