Astronomy Club Uses Virtual Access to Telescopes to Take Students into Space

Tomorrow the Tarantula Nebula, the Whirlpool Galaxy and Centaurus A will be on view. Next week, perhaps the Vesta asteroid will put on a show worth viewing as it changes position — at least to viewers on earth. Those are all potential sightings of interest for students working with the Slooh Education Slooh Astronomy Club.

A company originally funded by a seed grant from the National Science Foundation, Slooh provides a "turnkey space lab experience" for students, to help them gain experience in scientific reasoning while studying space via a network of telescopes available online.

The program includes STEAM curricula (for grades 4 through introductory college courses), robotic telescopes with photo capture functionality and access to a private virtual clubhouse for sharing observations.

Slooh's approach uses robotic telescopes around the world, including seven located at an observatory run by the Institute of Astrophysics of the Canary Islands; three based in Santiago, Chili; and another five expected to go online this year in the United Arab Emirates.

Students can reserve access to telescopes to set up "missions" for studying specific regions of the night sky using astronomical catalogs, coordinates and imaging filters. Once the mission is done, they automatically get access to FITS digital file images in their photo hubs. They also have access to learn activities that involve using the telescopes for specific purposes and then analyzing the resulting data. The application also provides gamification; as they complete "quests," they gain "gravity points" and move up the leaderboard.

The company also hosts "live" shows during special astronomical events, run by a team of astronomers.

Teachers can track student progress through the various activities via an administrative interface and integration with Google for Education.

Licensing for a group of 10 students is $500 per year; a 30-pack is $1,000. An "apprentice" license is available for an individual for $100; an "astronomer" license for a lone person is $300.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • outline of a modern school building as glowing blue geometric shapes, surrounded by binary code streams, with golden orbs and lines representing funding, set against a dark gray gradient with faint grid patterns

    FCC Cybersecurity Pilot Participants Selected

    The Federal Communications Commission has officially selected the participants for its Schools and Libraries Cybersecurity Pilot, the three-year program exploring the use of Universal Service funds to improve school and library defenses against cyber attacks.

  • glowing AI text box emerges from a keyboard on a desk, surrounded by floating padlocks, warning icons, and fragmented shields

    1 in 10 AI Prompts Could Expose Sensitive Data

    A recent study from data protection startup Harmonic Security found that nearly one in 10 prompts used by business users when interacting with generative AI tools may inadvertently disclose sensitive data.

  • Google Classroom tools

    Google Announces Classroom Updates, New Tools for Chromebooks

    Google has introduced a variety of features across its products for education, announced recently at the 2025 BETT ed tech event in London. Among the additions are enhancements to Google Classroom and new tools for Chromebooks, "designed to help address the diverse needs of students around the world," Google said in a blog post.

  • open laptop on a child-sized desk in a colorful elementary school classroom with holographic AI icons rising from the screen

    4 Ways Schools Are Using Google AI Tools for Teaching, Learning, and Administration

    In a recent blog post, Google shared an array of education customer stories, showcasing ways schools and districts are using AI tools like Gemini and NotebookLM to transform both learning and administrative tasks.