From john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au Mon Jul 21 00:23:21 2014 From: john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au (John O'Byrne) Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2014 00:23:21 +1000 Subject: [ASA] ASA AGM2013 minutes Message-ID: <9876B060-B29E-4C54-857D-9EC2DE8D15DA@sydney.edu.au> The draft minutes for the ASA?s Annual General Meeting (AGM) from 2013 (last year) can be found at http://asa.astronomy.org.au/council_reports/AGM13report.pdf These minutes will be presented to the 2014 AGM at Macquarie University on Wednesday. Any comments or corrections are welcome at that meeting or by email beforehand. John ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JOHN O?BYRNE Associate Head (Teaching & Learning), School of Physics Associate Dean (Standards), Faculty of Science Secretary, Astronomical Society of Australia Inc. Sydney Institute for Astronomy School of Physics | Faculty of Science THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Rm 205, Physics Building A28 | alternate: Rm 222, 44-70 Rosehill St Redfern H90 (see map) Postal address: School of Physics | The University of Sydney | NSW | Australia | 2006 T +61 2 9351 3184 | F +61 2 9351 7726 E john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au | W http://sydney.edu.au/science/people/john.obyrne CRICOS 00026A This email plus any attachments to it are confidential. Any unauthorised use is strictly prohibited. If you receive this email in error, please delete it and any attachments. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This email uses 100% recycled words and ideas. Do you really need to print it? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au Tue Jul 22 17:27:12 2014 From: john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au (John O'Byrne) Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2014 17:27:12 +1000 Subject: [ASA] Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools | astronomers wanted! In-Reply-To: References: <3525C1DC-7CDB-4E8F-A7FD-82394A9E97BF@sydney.edu.au> <5C774CD5-C4CC-4FF0-81F8-FC6EC013B114@sydney.edu.au> <51E3D0E889A14C4D96D90835F83548A85FEBFBB1@exmbx04-cdc.nexus.csiro.au> <167C8AE4-1354-40E3-AB07-E7B9FC46EB9D@sydney.edu.au> Message-ID: <7B675027-1DF0-4BBE-AD0F-B8B4352D0265@sydney.edu.au> AS a result of a discussion at the ASM today, here is information about the Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools program. Please consider if you could help - currently only 16 ASA members out of almost 700 are involved in the program. We can do better! John Share your love of science or mathematics by volunteering with Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools CSIRO Education?s Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools is a skilled volunteering program offering you the opportunity to make a difference to the science and mathematics education of primary and secondary school students. A successful, well-established national program, over 4000 professional partnerships between scientists, mathematicians and teachers have been created since July 2007. Currently more than 1600 scientists and mathematicians across Australia are involved in partnerships. Interested Scientist register here and Mathematicians register here. How it works: Individual scientists, engineers or mathematicians are partnered with individual teachers in ongoing professional partnerships. There is no cost to participate. Activities: Each partnership is flexible, unique and voluntary - the scientist/mathematician and teacher decide how they will work together taking account of workloads, the scientist/mathematician?s expertise, and the teacher and class needs. This allows partners to develop their own style and may include hands-on activities, presentations, demonstrations, mentoring, emailing and video conferencing. Time commitment: No fixed or minimum hours ? it?s up to the scientist/mathematician and teacher to negotiate the frequency of interactions. Scientists/mathematicians may visit the school once or twice a year, a couple of times a term, or once a week or month. Other partnerships utilise ICT (email and video conferencing) almost exclusively and have little face to face interaction. Skill/experience required: The definition of a scientist for this program includes any professional who is actively engaged in the fields of science and/or technology. It includes research scientists, engineers, IT professionals, applied scientists and medical practitioners, amongst others. Generally a Bachelor?s degree in one or more of the sciences, and currently working in a profession where science is a major component of your work is required. The definition of a mathematician for this program includes any professional who is actively engaged in the fields of mathematics and/or technology. It includes economists, accountants, research mathematicians, engineers, cryptographers, surveyors, biometricians and statisticians, amongst others. Generally a Bachelor?s degree in a mathematics related field and currently working in a profession where maths is a major component of your work is required. Available teachers: A map of teachers interested in establishing partnerships is available on our website at www.scientistsinschools.edu.au/scientists/unmatched.htm. You can nominate one of these teachers to be partnered with, but are also welcome to nominate a region/school/teacher of your choosing and we will aim to facilitate a partnership for you. More information can be found on our websites www.scientistsinschools.edu.au and www.mathematiciansinschools.edu.au. You can also register for Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools from the websites under the ?Get Involved? Tab. If you have any questions, please contact your local Scientists and Mathematicians in Schools Project Officer http://www.scientistsinschools.edu.au/contacts.htm ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JOHN O?BYRNE Associate Head (Teaching & Learning), School of Physics Associate Dean (Standards), Faculty of Science Secretary, Astronomical Society of Australia Inc. Sydney Institute for Astronomy School of Physics | Faculty of Science THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Rm 205, Physics Building A28 | alternate: Rm 222, 44-70 Rosehill St Redfern H90 (see map) Postal address: School of Physics | The University of Sydney | NSW | Australia | 2006 T +61 2 9351 3184 | F +61 2 9351 7726 E john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au | W http://sydney.edu.au/science/people/john.obyrne CRICOS 00026A This email plus any attachments to it are confidential. Any unauthorised use is strictly prohibited. If you receive this email in error, please delete it and any attachments. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This email uses 100% recycled words and ideas. Do you really need to print it? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au Wed Jul 23 09:23:38 2014 From: john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au (John O'Byrne) Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2014 09:23:38 +1000 Subject: [ASA] ASA - AGM documents Message-ID: <84707819-EA8E-4732-85DC-0103EED70C20@sydney.edu.au> Many of the documents for the ASA?s AGM today can be found at http://asa.astronomy.org.au/council.html#report As a result, we will not be too offended to see glowing apples during the AGM. John ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JOHN O?BYRNE Associate Head (Teaching & Learning), School of Physics Associate Dean (Standards), Faculty of Science Secretary, Astronomical Society of Australia Inc. Sydney Institute for Astronomy School of Physics | Faculty of Science THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Rm 205, Physics Building A28 | alternate: Rm 222, 44-70 Rosehill St Redfern H90 (see map) Postal address: School of Physics | The University of Sydney | NSW | Australia | 2006 T +61 2 9351 3184 | F +61 2 9351 7726 E john.obyrne at sydney.edu.au | W http://sydney.edu.au/science/people/john.obyrne CRICOS 00026A This email plus any attachments to it are confidential. Any unauthorised use is strictly prohibited. If you receive this email in error, please delete it and any attachments. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This email uses 100% recycled words and ideas. Do you really need to print it? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From matthew.colless at anu.edu.au Wed Jul 23 09:57:40 2014 From: matthew.colless at anu.edu.au (Matthew Colless) Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2014 23:57:40 +0000 Subject: [ASA] GMT-Sao Paulo-Brazil Press Release References: Message-ID: Here is the official press release on Sao Paulo/Brazil joining the GMT project: http://www.gmto.org/2014/07/s?o-paulo-brazil-to-join-giant-magellan-telescope-project/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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