If SLAS want a more compete outreach associated with the star parties, perhaps the purchase of a tent-like cover and a few folding chairs might be considered. This portable facility could be set up for use before and during a star party with an instructor talking about things you can do without a telescope such as software, aps, equipment, viewing techniques, charts, telescope basics, daily and annual motions,planetary movements, etc. These mini lectures may alleviate some of the lines at the scopes, and help educate folks about amateur astronomy. It could also grow thee club's enrollment. If kept short, they could be very informative. There can be sessions that can go all through the star party as long as people are there. A schedule of events would let people know what will be talked about and when. A computer, projector, and screen could be placed so as not to interfere with observing. Just a thought. On Monday, June 29, 2015 2:28 AM, Joan Carman <jcarman6@q.com> wrote: Jay, I really do appreciate your input. You've presented some very good ideas. You should have addressed this e-mail to the SLAS board. Pretty, sure the entire board is on this list, so I will ask them to consider this an e-mail to all of them FYI, SLAStrofest was intended for new members - you were one of the great speakers that day :) (rain or shi... rain) I will put your thoughts on the next board meeting agenda. Contact me or any other board member directly :) Fresh input and ideas are ALWAYS welcome. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jay inUT" <jayleads@gmail.com> To: "Utah Astronomy" <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2015 6:51:33 PM Subject: [Utah-astronomy] SPOC EVENT I hate to use Utah Astronomy for SLAS since it is not a "SLAS" site but here are my two bits for the 500 or so that showed up last night. I have a feeling this will be an email I may regret sending also but I will do it anyway. I heard driving around the valley this week the ads on KUER 90.1 for the Star Party and I read a couple of articles tying that in with the event at SPOC on Saturday. Could that even, the conjunction of Venus and Jupiter have driven numbers up so high? Just a thought though I am sure the marketing is helping also. Second will that mean more people at other SPOC events like the General Meeting? I am skeptical. Why? Going to an outreach event is one thing. Going to a meeting is entirely different thing. IF you have on average 40 people show up to a monthly meeting (not sure on the number) and you have 302 members listed on the roll right now, that is a 13.5% turn out by the current membership. You may, MAY is the key word, get another 5 out but I do not hear or see the General Meeting being advertised like the outreach event at SPOC and Harmons. IF the question is how to grow the club, besides traditional outreach I am a strong proponent of getting some volunteers in the club, and I'll offer myself and use the XT10 I have for it, to teach a family of 4 or 5 (kids over 12) how to use a star atlas or sky safarri, how to set up, collimate, and then use a RACI and Telrad to find objects and put an object in the eyepiece. THAT I BELIEVE will over time, grow the membership because young people and younger parents in their 20's and early 30's want to DO things, not just look. You get them doing and you have them. It is a transition that is occurring in education as that field adapts to changes in society among children and adults. Promote via a sign up to spend an evening learning to use a telescope (I'll even bring my Explore Scientific AR102 for them to use for a refractor) and if someone or a group of no more than 4 signs up, I'll show up with the XT10 and the AR102 and we'll have a great evening where I teach, they learn and do. Oh, I won't go through to an outreach event though when done on the two weekends (1 before and 1 of) new moon. I'm at a dark site then doing the hobby for me. So kudos on a huge turnout! I almost came and then didn't. Wish I had now. Brings up the last point. How to get more people out. What keeps me away is to be frank, I am not at the outreach point yet. I love going to dark sites and observing and doing my thing there. I enjoy the club, some of the best people I've ever met are in the club. However, of late (last 2 years or so), I only have time for so much astronomy in a month, and I admit, I'm selfish, I am going to go to the dark site if I can only fit one thing in. That's easier for me. I guess for others it is something similar. They may have other commitments they feel take priority which is fine. Like it or not I would question if having SPOC always on a Saturday is as productive as having it on a Friday and doing Harmon's on a Saturday if the goal is to get more members to take telescopes to SPOC. Why? Like it or not the demographic is that you have a lot of LDS people in this area and Sunday is a huge day in terms of their commitments. If you have to be up and at Church for meetings at 7:00a.m., then taking a telescope out to show the public at SPOC the night before when you live in the SLC Valley, on a Saturday night is not going to be the priority. So if you switch a couple of the SPOC events to a Friday, and a Harmon's to a Saturday I am curious if you would have more members come out with scopes to a SPOC event? Please no bashing of personal beliefs here, I am just trying to bring up some possible solutions that are free, and can be easily dis-guarded and forgotten. Last, for a new member, the core club members can be intimidating with their knowledge and how they go about doing things. There has to be a way for these newer members to integrate into the club and that is by probably branching out what the club does. Some are like me, are in it to observe at a dark site. Some are in it to do outreach. Some both. Some are solar, some are refaractor, some are reflector. We could go on but the more the club appeals to a broader branch of people, the more those people make relationships within the club, the more likely are they to show up to a club event with their equipment. Last thing. I believe the club has some of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Outreach kits. Why not have a couple of those set up at SPOC to give those in the lines something to do? Modify them so that a few people can walk around and share some of the activities with those in line so they don't lose their place? Print out and make a few Uncle Al's Star Wheels and have a few walk around and show people how to use those or better yet, how to access Google Sky or Sky Saffari or some of the other free programs on their Smart Phone so they can search for constellations in the sky and do a Constellation Scavenger hunt? Okay, I'll stop but hopefully those are some ideas that can be used. Sorry to make this so long but I ask one thing. EVEN if you DISAGREE, DISLIKE what I suggested, don't dish it unless you have a suggestion to replace it. Too much dishing going on and if you want the club to really grow long term, it's time for all involved to seek first to understand, and then be understood. Just some thoughts. -- Thanks! Jay _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Send messages to the list to Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com The Utah-Astronomy mailing list is not affiliated with any astronomy club. To unsubscribe go to: http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Then enter your email address in the space provided and click on "Unsubscribe or edit options". _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Send messages to the list to Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com The Utah-Astronomy mailing list is not affiliated with any astronomy club. To unsubscribe go to: http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Then enter your email address in the space provided and click on "Unsubscribe or edit options".