Redux: Auditing Astronomy Class

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This was first published in Dec 6, 2011 — it was originally a guest post, Cameron wasn’t yet an LWONer — and was honorable-mentioned for the American Institute of Physics’ 2012 science writing prize in the New Media category. Her mom sounds like a doll.
I’m not sure exactly where this story begins, but maybe it’s here: Sometime this summer, my mom decided to take an astronomy class. She had taken drama and philosophy classes through the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UC Berkeley  and audited a history of theater course. She’d heard that this particular astronomy class was aimed at non-science majors, and that the professor, Alex Filippenko, had won all sorts of teaching awards. She emailed him to see if it was okay for her to sit in – it was – and then convinced a few friends to join her.

Maybe what I should say next is that my mom has never been that interested in science. I actually didn’t know how much she didn’t like it until we talked about it recently.  In college, she filled her science requirement with comparative anatomy, a class that required dissecting frogs and cats. “I hated the smell of formaldehyde,” she said. “Dinner was right after that. I just hated it.”

Astronomy had also gotten on her bad list. “Whenever I saw something in the paper about a comet, a supernova—I just didn’t read it. I thought, I’m never going to understand this anyway.”

This class had no formaldehyde, just a professor who has enough astronomy-themed T-shirts to cover three afternoons a week for a whole semester without repeating a shirt.  Before each class, he played a piece of music that somehow related to the theme of the lecture—Clair de Lune, Stardust, Dark Side of the Moon, “popular stuff, like by Moby,” my mom said.

That’s how I first heard about what was going on in class. My mom called one day and asked if I knew what shepherd moons are. I didn’t (although I did know the song by Enya) so she explained.

I wished I had my pen and notebook with me, so I could have written down exactly what she said. But I’m not sure I could have captured how it felt to hear. Her voice had the same combination of cheeriness and awe usually reserved for plays, mystery novels, and television series from Friday Night Lights to Downton Abbey—but there was something else in it, too.  Shepherd moons, she told me, were moons near the rings around planets. These moons can shape a ring with the force of their own gravity.

The next time I asked her about the class, I had a pen handy.  I can’t totally decipher my notes—they’re more cryptic than usual, partly because I was tucking the phone against my chin, propping a baby against my side with a forearm, and scribbling on the back of an envelope on top of the piano, but mainly because I felt odd taking notes while talking to my mom. But here’s a sampling:

“gamma ray bursts”

“black holes are the warping of space and time”

“evaporating black holes”

And the last line: “I know enough that I look at the world differently.”

That’s what she says every time she talks about the class—that knowing more about the stars has made the world around her change.

She told me it’s because of the professor, how good he is. For Halloween, he dressed up as a black hole and, with the help of his own kids, tossed Mars Bars and Starbursts to the students in the audience. He swung a doughnut on a string to demonstrate centripetal force. According to a report from one of his students, he even broke a rib in class when he jumped on to a skateboard from a desk.

My mom said he connects astronomy to their everyday lives. When Pluto got demoted as a planet, some people were upset. Sometimes, he told the class, you just have to get over it. Maybe you didn’t get an A on a test. Maybe you broke up with a girlfriend. Maybe you’re still orbiting the sun, even though you aren’t part of a special club anymore (which my mom now knows by the mnemonic “My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Nothing”).

I listened to one of his lectures online, this one about asteroids, and while I know it’s not the same as in person, I did start to understand what she meant. Near the end of the lecture, he moves from the basics of asteroids to talk about how an earth-wide crisis, like an impending collision, might someday bring people together, that it could be an opportunity to stop wars and look beyond the other things that divide us. In the recording, you can hear the students breaking into applause. The sound of it sent me about the rest of my earthbound day still feeling like there was a hand cupped under my heart.

My mom said she’s not always sure she understands exactly what he’s saying, but she feels like she could. She might take the class again the next time he teaches it. She’s started watching episodes of NOVA. My mom read to me from her notes that we are made of stardust, that every atom inside us is made of elements from exploding stars. She told me that there’s a meteor shower coming up, she can’t remember which one.

This was at the end of the most recent email I got from her about the class:

this quote from Steve Weinberg (don’t know who he is):

<The effort to understand the universe is one of the few things that lifts human life a little above the level of farce, and gives it some of the grace of tragedy>

Can’t remember why I wrote that down, but I liked it.

I like it, too. And now I know what I was trying to explain about her voice, just like I know where this story should begin, and end. It’s not tragedy at all, just grace.

_____

Cameron Walker writes about science and a few other things from her home in California.  @camonthecoast   Her stories:  Depth Afield, Full Life With Woodpeckers , Digging Deep

photo, black hole:  Alain R

video:  , via NASA

15 thoughts on “Redux: Auditing Astronomy Class

  1. It’s so nice to read something about how a good teacher can change someone’s whole world. I’m terribly envious of your mother – he sounds amazing.

  2. Lovely to read! Your mother, like myself was probably semi-deliberately divided from whatever scientific interests she had in her early life… that’s what used to happen to girls in school.
    For me– I was interested in astronomy, archeology, whales and oceans and insects; but people kept telling me that girls weren’t good at science. I had no idea that my interests were, in fact, related to science. I didn’t realize it till I hit my thirties!

    Thank goodness we always have the chance to see our world through different eyes if we only try.

  3. Wonderful story about the fascination of the universe. I am a member of The Albuquerque Astronomical Society (www.TAAS.org) and we encounter this reaction all the time from members of the public when we use telescopes and simple lectures to present the night sky. Astronomy is a non-intimidating science to most people. I believe this is because most people’s first exposure to the night sky was not as a science student, but rather as a person simply seeing the night sky. It have been a camping trip, a visit to a planetarium or an opportunity to look through a telescope.

    My advice is to turn off the TV and go out in the night air and just look up at the sky. You will be amazed at what you see.

  4. I am a woman in love with science, trying to teach the love of science at a girls’ school. (Yes, single-sex education still exists as a uniquely powerful force). I hope I can have a fraction the impact of your mother’s teacher. I hope he knows we are continuing the mission. Thanks for writing and putting a smile on my face.

  5. Thanks so much for reading this, and for your nice comments! @Sid, I think videos of the lectures (some of them, anyway) are available online–not quite the same, but something. (And @Hannah, she *is* terrific–and also terribly embarrassed that she did not know who Steve Weinberg is. Now she’ll never forget!)

  6. This is lovely, Cameron.

    I was caught off guard at how moved I was to see Jupiter and its moons through the telescope at Lowell observatory at the NASW meeting. Much different from seeing a photo. I’ve never been a huge astronomy buff but I’ve felt different since.

  7. Cameron,
    A beautifully composed story of our fascinating universe as perceived by a “science is not my cup of tea” mom. While I have not met the author I have had the pleasure of knowing and working with the mom at Cal. Like mother like daughter.
    Your writing reflects well on your experience at the home of the banana slugs. Good luck on your efforts to juggle notes, baby and telephone as you continue your work.

  8. This was wonderful and reminded me of my own family. I joke that we have a terribly hard time staying out of a classroom. My mom got a BA in math in 1968, then took college classes part time because she felt like it, and got a BS in computer science in her 50s. My dad got a MS in chemistry at about the same age. I have a sister who quit her job and got a PhD in mechanical engineering approaching 40, and at just past 40 I’m taking chemistry classes to convert my decades old chemistry minor to a major.

    I hate the assumption some people have that college is only for 18-22 year olds. At any age, the brain is capable of learning something new, whether art, science, history, or a new skill or craft. The only way to avoid becoming stagnant is to try something different.

    Congratulations to your mom for trying something new – and enjoying it. 🙂

  9. Thanks again for all of the comments.

    @Oscar–yes, I wish I was better at it, too (at first when I heard how much she liked the class, I thought, “Why haven’t I been able to inspire such enthusiasm!”)

    @Baroque97– what a great family! And your comment makes me want to go back to school, too. Those university course catalogs are always dangerous. . .

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