Astro-animation - A Case Study of Art and Science Education
Laurence Arcadias, Robin H.D. Corbet, Declan McKenna, Isabella, Potenziani

TL;DR
This paper presents an innovative astro-animation course at Maryland Institute of Art, integrating art and science education through student-scientist collaborations, fostering science understanding via creative animation projects and internships.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interdisciplinary course combining art and astrophysics, detailing its implementation, interactions, and effectiveness in enhancing science engagement among art students.
Findings
Students gain science insights through animation projects.
Internships at NASA enhance student experience.
Program promotes informal STE(A)M learning.
Abstract
Art and science are different ways of exploring the world, but together they have the potential to be thought-provoking, facilitate a science-society dialogue, raise public awareness of science, and develop an understanding of art. For several years, we have been teaching an astro-animation class at the Maryland Institute College of Art as a collaboration between students and NASA scientists. Working in small groups, the students create short animations based on the research of the scientists who are going to follow the projects as mentors. By creating these animations, students bring the power of their imagination to see the research of the scientists through a different lens. Astro-animation is an undergraduate-level course jointly taught by an astrophysicist and an animator. In this paper we present the motivation behind the class, describe the details of how it is carried out, and…
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