Dino Academy Registration Now Open

Dino Academy Registration Now Open

Dino Days T RexThe Sherman Museum Dino Academy Registration Now Open

Registration is now open for The Sherman Museum DINO ACADEMY. The hands-on workshop for children ages 6 – 12 is intended to provide a fun, educational experience as part of the museums’ summer program DINO DAYS. The Academy will be held July 12, 13 and 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

“DINO ACADEMY gives the kids a fun opportunity to touch and feel the type of casts and fossils that paleontologists get to work with every day”, Executive Director, Dan Steelman stated. Participants will discuss a different topic daily. Tuesday will be “Monsters of the Deep”, Wednesday is “Prehistoric Skies” and Thursday is, “Giants of the Land”. Children are able to attend one day or all three. The cost will be $15.00 for one day, $25.00 for two days, and $40.00 for all three days. In addition to the educational aspect of DINO ACADEMY, the kids will work on a craft, watch a 3-D movie, dig for a Chasmosaurus skull and be given a tour of the DINO DAYS exhibit. A snack will be provided mid-morning.

Please call the museum at 903-893-7623 to register your child for DINO ACADEMY 2016. There will be 10 openings per day. Payment arrangements can be made at that time. Walk-ins will be welcome provided there is space available at that time. Parents are welcome to stay and attend with their child or they may drop them off and return to pick them up at noon. Identification will be required at pick up for those parents

The Sherman Museum is open Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Thursday from 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Admission for DINO DAYS is $5.00 for ages 5 and up, FREE for children 4 and under and FREE for museum members.

About The Sherman Museum

The Sherman Museum is a non-profit 501(c)(3) educational organization devoted to collecting, preserving and interpreting objects of historical significance to Grayson County and the Greater North Texas Region.

To learn more about dinosaurs, please visit The Sherman Museum website dedicated to DINO DAYS at . For more information about The Sherman Museum, visit us on the web at www.theshermanmuseum.org.

Austin College Summer Solstice Watch

Austin College Summer Solstice Watch

Marking the Passage of Time

Austin College Summer Solstice WatchAustin College| Sherman Texas

Faculty and staff of Austin College will gather Monday, June 20, in the College’s IDEA Center to mark the Summer Solstice as they watch the progression of the Sun through the building’s solstice calendar. As the light from the Sun travels along the floor the center the group will welcome the Summer Solstice at 1:28 p.m. Members of the community are invited to the free event, which begins at 1:15 p.m. in the Oscar Page Atrium of the IDEA Center.

Austin College’s IDEA Center solar observatory marks the location of the Sun at local “high” noon, a few hours before the precise solstice at 5:34 p.m., explained Dr. David Baker, Austin College professor of physics. “Sherman solar enthusiasts need not worry,” he said. “The beam of sunlight in the IDEA Center atrium will be ‘spot on’ as it hits the summer solstice marker, the Macedonian symbol for the Sun.”

Dr. David Baker, professor of physics, will explain the progress of the solstice as it occurs. “This event gives us a sense of progress,” said Baker. “We don’t pay attention to the Earth’s rotation in our everyday lives, but the Earth keeps on moving.” Watching the sunlight align with the Earth is a truly fantastic experience for Dr. Baker. “Within seconds, the sunlight is there and gone,” he said. “It’s mesmerizing, almost magical.”

Summer solstice occurs when the Sun reaches the northernmost limit in its path in the sky, Baker explained, adding that solstice means “Sun-stopping.” Between spring equinox and summer solstice, the Sun moves northward in the sky from the equator each day. At solstice, the Sun stops this northward movement, reverses direction, and begins heading south. The exact moment of this Sun-stoppage will be on June 20, at 5:34 p.m. CDT. The Sun will be directly overhead near the Hawaiian Islands at this time, Baker said.

The idea of a solstice calendar in the IDEA Center began with physics faculty member Dr. Don Salisbury. After visiting an unfinished solar observatory with students on a trip to Florence, Italy, during a January Term, he became inspired to propose a similar project for the soon-to-be-constructed IDEA Center. A few years ago when the building was constructed, students and faculty took precise measurements in order to properly place the gnomon hole opening in the building’s roof to let the sunlight into the atrium. The careful measurements also were used to inscribe the calendar markings into the terrazzo floor of the building. The IDEA Center solstice calendar pays homage to scientific contributions across the world; symbols of Western, Eastern, and indigenous cultures are represented.

Austin College, a private national liberal arts college located north of Dallas in Sherman, Texas, has earned a reputation for excellence in academic preparation, international study, pre-professional foundations, leadership development, committed faculty, and hands-on, adventurous learning opportunities. One of 40 schools profiled in Loren Pope’s influential book Colleges That Change Lives, Austin College boasts a welcoming community that embraces diversity and individuality, with more than 36 percent of students representing ethnic minorities. A residential student body of 1,250 students and a faculty of more than 100 allow a 12:1 student-faculty ratio and personalized attention. The College is related by covenant to the Presbyterian Church (USA) and cultivates an inclusive atmosphere that supports students’ faith journeys regardless of religious tradition. Founded in 1849, the College is the oldest institution of higher education in Texas operating under original name and charter.

Experience Night At The Museum

Experience Night At The Museum

Night at the MuseumExperience Night At The Museum on June 16

The Sherman Museum | Sherman Texas

Do things really come alive at night in the museum? Like in the movie, Night at the Museum, The Sherman Museum  will give the public a chance to see for themselves on Thursday, June 16 starting at 7:00 pm. The museum will stay open until 9:00 pm so the museum’s current DINO DAYS exhibit can be viewed in the fading light of evening.

NIGHT AT THE M– USEUM will feature DINO DAYS stars “Ivan,” a 40-foot-long Tyrannosaurus Rex under near dark conditions, so children are asked to bring their flashlights. “We want to offer a different perspective to the exhibit. We want the kids to have fun interacting with the dinosaurs in the shadowy conditions of evening,” noted Executive Director Dan Steelman. As a special treat, the museum will serve popcorn and drinks in the 3-D theater while the 2015-release animated movie, Back to the Jurassic, plays. The 3-D film follows three kids as they travel back in time and are adopted by a dinosaur mom, while their real parents back home plot their rescue. The popular DINO DIG will also be available for children visiting the museum to experience a night time excavation of fossils with flash lights.

The Sherman Museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm and from 10:00 am to 8:00 pm on Thursdays. Admission is $5.00 for ages 5 and up and FREE for children 4 and under and museum members. Discounts are available to groups of 10 or more. About The Sherman Museum The Sherman Museum is a non-profit 501(c) (3) educational organization devoted to collecting, preserving and interpreting objects of historical significance for visitors and residents of Grayson County and the Greater North Texas Region. The museum was previously known as The Red River Historical Museum prior to a name change in March 2011.

For more information about The Sherman Museum contact us at www.theshermanmuseum.org.