STEM in 30 — 15 Years of Humans in Space
NASA,NASM,National Air And Space Museum (Tourist Attraction),STEM in 30,ISS,International Space St,15 years,15th anniversary
The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s STEM in 30 series of live, fast-paced, 30-minute webcasts are designed to increase interest and engagement in STEM for students. This episode, which originated from the museum Nov. 18, 2015, celebrates the 15th anniversary of continuous occupation of the International Space Station and will look at the incredible achievements for the station during the last 15 years.
#STEM #Years #Humans #Space
STEM in 30 — 15 Years of Humans in Space
11 Comments
11 Comments
br aki so eu ?
Really interesting
that epic intro though 3:06
That was cool, im surprised they havent built a space station further away from earth
I wonder whats the longest amount of time you can stay in space without permanent damage or permanent effects
Que Paso Con EL Apolo 18? Existio ? Fue Lanzado A la Luna? Regresaron Sus tripulantes?
mars mars mars mars ‚.…
Great video!
I think NASA’s YouTube channel could take a lot of cues from popular science channels which use a format that directly engages the audience. I know they were asking and answering questions, but what I mean is our perspective was that of a camera uncomfortably far away much of the time, with which little or no eye contact was being made. There’s clearly loads of great content to share here, but I don’t think this is an effective delivery system for these awesome knowledge bombs.
And I’m not being funny, but a little piece of me died both during the awkward zoom out at 0:01 — 0:07 and the… whatever that was at 2:45. Holy wowza. And the music! Mother of mercy! There are big production value problems here that can be addressed easily by an organisation like NASA. I can only imagine how simply taking the time to approach content producers like Vsauce for advice would improve matters.
Think of all the millions of people you could reach, with the fantastic rise in popularity in public consciousness that space has seen recently, if you raised the production quality on your channel. I feel like NASA is getting left behind in their promotion of science, honestly. It’s not just this video; this has been a problem for quite some time.
How is it you can be showing such amazing things, and it’s coming right from the horse’s mouth, and it’s getting 2 thousand views?! Not to mention a rather high proportion of dislikes. The problem is not the content, it is the delivery. Don’t talk down to your audience; address them as equals and be passionate about it. None of this awkward ham acting.
That goes especially for science education for kids! If they’re intelligent enough to engage with the content at all then they don’t need or want a bizarre pantomime, they need their imaginations fired up. I can think of no faster way to turn off smart, imaginative kids than by dressing up interesting content in awful cheesy nonsense which insults their intelligence.
It is not my intention to be negative for its own sake, but I just think this is important and a really wasted opportunity from such a key player as NASA.
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That ptach tho. Hydra confirmed.