GLOBE Hydrology
Naperville Community Unit School District 203
May 18, 2006
Ms. Kouri met some of her 4th and 5th graders at Herrick Lake. Her students raised some Bass Fish in her classroom this year. On Thursday, May 18th, 2006 they went to Herrick Lake and released one of them after they carefully checked the temperature. They enthusiastically waved good by to their scaled friend. Mr. Lopatka helped students take GPS readings of the site, so that they could let GLOBE teachers, students and scientists know where Herrick Lake was located on the globe. They also measured the PH, conductivity, temperature and turbidity of the water. The site became the second Highlands School GLOBE Hydrology site. They have been monitoring the water at the DuPage River for several years. They have also been monitoring macro invertebrates at the river site. Ms. Kouri was thrilled to see 2 of her former students on Late Night with David Letterman. |
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Kate Szrom / Staff photographer
Kennedy Junior High School students Ike Swetlitz, left, a
seventh-grader, and Nate Weeks, a sixth-grader, appeared Monday on
"The Late Show with David Letterman" during its "Kid
Scientist" segment. While Swetlitz's experiment demonstrating
Newton's first law of motion wasn't so wild, Weeks' simulation of a
grain elevator explosion shot a mushroom cloud toward Letterman's face. |
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courtesy of CBS
Kennedy Junior High School sixth-grader Nate Weeks (right) performs an
experiment on The Late Show with David Letterman on Monday.
Weeks' experiment simulating a grain elevator explosion shot a mushroom
cloud in the air, nearly burning the talk-show host. |
Kennedy Junior High School sixth-grader Nate Weeks wasn't nervous when he appeared Monday on the "Late Show with David Letterman" during its "Kid Scientist" segment. He was just a little rattled when it was over and he realized he'd forgotten to wear safety goggles while simulating a grain elevator explosion right under Letterman's nose.
"For the rest of the thing I was like, 'Man, I almost burned David Letterman's face off," Weeks said.
Weeks was one of three area students who appeared on the late-night talk show Monday. Kennedy seventh-grader Ike Swetlitz and Wheaton Christian Grammar School seventh-grader Emily Bonga also performed scientific experiments on the show. The three made the trip to New York City with retired Naperville North High School science teacher Lee Marek and Naperville Central High School science teacher Jaci Gentile. Marek and Gentile have taken groups of Naperville students to appear on the show 15 times since Oct. 30, 1997.
Kennedy seventh-graders James Mitchell and Vicky Wei also made the trip but weren't selected to appear on the show.
Letterman's producers selected the five students from a group of about a dozen recommended to Marek and Gentile by district science teachers. Each student performs a scientific demonstration on camera and explains the scientific principles at work, and the producers pick their favorites.
When they arrive at the show, the kids audition again for the producers, who pick three to perform with Letterman.
"This time they had asked for some fire or explosions," Gentile said. "Something big."
Weeks' dust fire experiment went up in flames – which meant it was a huge success.
Bonga went second, turning a 2-liter bottle into a rocket that shot into the studio lights and sprayed water everywhere.
Then it was Swetlitz's turn. By then the pressure was off, he said.
"I think I was more nervous when they were choosing who was going to go on and who wasn't going to go on then when we were actually doing it," he said.
Swetlitz was asked to perform an experiment he hadn't rehearsed. He ended up using a piece of PVC pipe with a piece of wood bolted around it to demonstrate Newton's first law of motion – that objects in motion tend to stay in motion, and an object at rest tends to stay at rest unless acted upon by another force. He took a mallet and struck the pipe to demonstrate that while it looked like the wood was moving, in reality the pipe was.
"I think he thought it was pretty cool," Swetlitz said of Letterman's reaction. "But I think he liked some of the exploding ones better."
- Contact Tim Waldorf at (630) 416-5270 or twaldorf@scn1.com.
GLOBE Stars
GLOBE Hydrology Study websites:
Steeple Run Spring 2005 Hydrology in Naperville
Steeple Run Fall 2005 Hydrology in Naperville
Steeple Run Spring 2006 Hydrology in Naperville
Steeple Run Fall 2006 Hydrology in Naperville
Steeple Run Spring 2007 Hydrology in Naperville
Steeple Run students at the Morton Arboretum 2005
Steeple Run Soil Temperature
Steeple Run Bass Release
Steeple Run Rocket Day
Steeple Run and Highlands Bass release 11/4/06
Highlands School October 14, 2005 Hydrology at Highlands School
Highlands School October 11, 2007 Hydrology at Highlands School
Highlands School macro invertebrates study.
Highlands School Bass Release
Highlands School Site Definition
Randolph School Hydrology at Marquette Park
http://www.geocities.com/glopatka/ranhydro2.html
GLOBE Program: http://www.globe.gov