Thanks for the awesome time The Goddard School
The Goddard School (Saint Augustine) is feeling delighted.
September 25 at 2:18 PM ·
We had a super fun visit from Engineering for Kids of Jacksonville FL. The children got to make Rockets out of paper tubes, paper, toilet paper and tape. The children learned all the vocabulary about a rocket and then they got to launch them!
Come see this amazing new school! The Goddard School of St Augustine is having an open house from 10am-3pm today! Come build a rocket with us! The address is 4041 County Rd 210 W, St. Augustine, FL 32092
Check out our friends over on the soccer field!
Soccer Shots of North Florida
July 29 at 9:46 AM ·
The best compliment you can give is to share the fun of soccer with your friends and their kids, please share this post!
Come and share the fun with us...our Fall season is starting soon!
Find your location here: northflorida.soccershots.com
Check out our schedule of awesome 1/2 day summer camps 9am-noon!
Register at: https://www.engineeringforkids.com/jacksonv…/programs/camps/
July 6th - 10th:
Good Foundations: The Engineering of Cities (K-2nd Grade)
Smart Home, Smart City: The Building of Cities (3rd-6th Grade)
July 13th - 17th:
LEGO (R) Robotics: Amusing Adventures (K-2nd Grade)
These are the DROIDS you're looking for! (3rd-6th Grade)
July 20th - 24th:
Joust! The Engineering of Medieval Times (K-2nd Grade)
Storm the Castle: The Engineering of Medieval Times (3rd-6th Grade)
July 27th - 31st:
Going Camping! The Engineering of the Outdoors (K-2nd)
LEGO (R) EV3 (R) Robotics: Olympic Games (3rd-6th Grade)
We had a BLAST launching our rockets today at Aerospace Engineering Camp! Tomorrow drones!
We are so excited summer camps starting next week!!!
https://campscui.active.com/orgs/RenaissanceYouthLLC#/selectSessions/2803311
Engineering for Kids of North Florida updated their address.
Engineering for Kids of North Florida updated their phone number.
Check out our friends last week celebrating Halloween 🎃 engineering their very own putt putt golf courses at Rosewood Academy's. ⛳️
🍁It's Fall Ya'll 🍂 Have some fun with your family creating some festive arts and crafts!
GOODHOUSEKEEPING.COM
Don't Throw Out Those Extra Cupcake Liners, Since You Can Repurpose Them for Crafts
We had fun building and playing our drums at Ketterlinus today!
We made lego airplanes today and coded them!!! Flexin’ our brain muscles today 💪
Chemical engineering at Ketterlinus today!!! Fun with Flub!
Our friends at Rosewood Academy learning how to code using Scratch! Flexing our brains! 🧠 💪
"The mind that opens to a new idea never returns to its original size."
-Albert Einstein
Simply stunning!
Hugh Hou
February 23 at 7:55 AM ·
MARS Virtual Tour - What's Mars surface looks like to you?
NASA’s Perseverance Navcams 360° photo (edited by Hugh Hou )
How to experience this in your Oculus VR headset:
1. Save this post (Add this to your “Saved Items”)
2. Save it on a list
3. Put on your Oculus Quest 2 / Quest 1 VR headset. On the left side of your Oculus homepage menu, click on “Saved”
4. You should be able to see your saved Mars 360 photo
5. Click on “Watch” and it will open an Oculus Browser
6. The 360 photo will load
7. On the top left corner of the photo, you will see the “Enter VR” button
8. Click “Enter VR” and it will go into a full immersive view of the Mars 360 photo
Alternatively, you can copy the Facebook post’s URL and open your Oculus Browser on your Quest 1 or Quest 2 VR headset, and view it directly.
I hope you can enjoy this unique experience in immersive virtual reality!
From NASA - This panorama, taken on Feb. 20, 2021, by the Navigation Cameras, or Navcams, aboard NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover, was stitched together from six individual images after they were sent back to Earth.
Disclaimer: the original photo does not have the full sky, I edited the sky to have a full 360 experience inside a VR headset like Oculus Quest 2. The sky does not represent the real sky from Mars.
Credit
NASA/JPL-Caltech NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover
#CountdownToMars
Very cool!
Eric C Wilhelm
December 29, 2015 at 1:35 AM · Detroit, MI ·
The moon passed between Nasa's Deep Space Climate Observatory and the Earth, allowing the satellite to capture this rare image of the moon's far side in full sunlight. We normally don't see this side of the moon. As the moon is tidally locked to the earth and doesn't rotate, we only ever see the one face from the earth. Awesome shot!