Category Archives: event

The science of my Christmas day

Marty Jopson from Otley Science Festival visits South Leeds

What surprised me most about my visit to the Hillside centre in Beeston, South Leeds on the 12th December was how posh the place was. I’m not sure what I expected, but nothing so grand or so extensive. I had been invited, By South Leeds Community Radio to come and perform a couple of short science shows to the assembled throng at the Christmas fair, their first S-Factor event.

So, I came up with a slightly spurious narrative that allowed me to do lots of cool and silly science things on the stage. My basic premise was that these were the things I would be doing on Christmas – not to entertain the kids, but for my own enjoyment. I started with mucking about with oobleck – a word invented by Dr Seuss that now has come to mean what you get if you mix corn-flour with water. It’s a non-Newtonian fluid, or a dilatant that is solid when you try moving it and liquid when you let it flow gently. Kinda like the opposite of ketchup. I made a suitable mess with that, even bounced it off the wall once, but not for the second show as this makes a real mess.

That was followed up with exploding film canisters, multi-coloured fireballs, collapsing coke cans and the oh-so-cunning remote candle snuffer. And yes, I managed to weave these all into the science of my Christmas day. It was tenuous and involved an element of suspension of disbelief, but I think I managed to keep the crowd on my side.

The temptation at these events is to talk to the kids, after all surely no serious minded adult is going to mess about with corn-flour gunk. But I think they should. So, I deliberately addressed the adults and exhorted them to give it a go. I tired to give them an excuse to have a bit of fun and experience by play. Which is of course one of the central tenets of the science centre movement. The kids get hauled to a science centre, they play with the exhibits and learn something based on the interactive experience. But as anyone who has worked in a science centre can tell you, once the child has moved on, the accompanying adult lingers and has a quiet go themselves.

This Christmas let your hair down, make up some oobleck, try punching it, try chucking it about (best in the garden) and ignore the mess, it’s just corn-flour after all. Following my shows in Beeston a number of adults came up to ask about some of the things I had done.  All of them said they were great activities for the kids, but I could see it in their eyes, they wanted to play with oobleck.

The S Factor gets off to a fantastic start!

What a great start to the S Factor! A record-breaking 800 people crowded to the Otley Science Fair on Saturday to enjoy all sorts of hands-on exhibits and displays and, thanks to the new S Factor Project, to meet 22-year-old Woman of the Year and eco-inventor Emily Cummins.

The annual Otley Science Fair was our first outing. Otley Science Festival is an S Factor partner, giving us the chance to raise the profile of science with adult learners, many of whom have had little formal science education. Otley’s science star Marty Jopson (also of the BBC’s One Show) blew things up all day, while Emily demonstrated her sustainable fridge and other inventions. Other S Factor partners were present: Thackray Medical Museum had an interactive display, Vera Media brought women from South Leeds to take photos and space scientist Maggie Aderin-Pocock was interviewed by South Leeds Community Radio.

And more than 80 adults filled in our questionnaire, indicating that global warming and incurable diseases are high on people’s list of science concerns.

“I’ve had a great day,” said Emily Cummins. “I’ve talked to hundreds of people of all ages, up to 94 years old! Its exciting because students learn science in schools but parents and adults are not so up to date. I love it that the S Factor is reaching adults, so they learn how exciting science is and can share that with their children and others.”

“My science is about changing the world,” Emily added. “This project is helping show just how relevant science is to the world we live in. And as part of it all, its great the project is giving a bigger profile to women.”

Meet eco-inventor Emily Cummins!

Emily Cummins

Emily Cummins and her sustainable fridge

We are getting excited about Otley Science Fair on 21 November 2009: Emily Cummins, an award-winning, amazing young inventor will join us for the day to demonstrate her sustainable fridge and other inventions.

She’ll share a table with S Factor’s UK Resource Centre for Women in Science, Engineering and Technology. So people can come and talk to us as well, and find out a bit more about the role women can play in science.

The fair will be full of other displays and demonstrations – lots of fun things to do and find out about.