![](../kanagawa-u/images/special.gif)
Meikei
was among four schools to participate in the EarthKAM project to photograph
Earth using a digital camera aboard the space shuttle Endeavor by remote
control. For a week in midwinter, eleventh graders take part in a special
early-morning training program. The girls practice kendo, while the boys
play rugby. |
Meikei
High School
![](../kanagawa-u/images/titlesp.gif)
The school festival, field day, and other big days students look forward to
|
|
|
1 Earth KAM
EarthKAM
(Earth Knowledge Acquired by Middle School Students) is an educational
program sponsored by the University of California at San Diego (UCSD).
A digital camera on board the space shuttle Endeavor, whose crew included
Japanese astronaut Mamoru Mori, was remote-controlled from Earth to
take photographs of the planet.
|
These
photos were then used in science and social studies classes in schools.
The National Space Development Agency of Japan invited Japanese schools
to participate in the program, and Meikei High School was among the
four schools selected.
About
30 students, mainly eighth and ninth grade boys, were involved in the
project at Meikei High School. Seventh and eighth graders made a list
of the places they wanted to have photographed, and data for each site
was analyzed on a computer, such as whether it would lie below the space
shuttle's orbit and whether it would show up in a photo with a field
of 86 by 130 kilometers (53 by 81 miles). Since photographs of the Earth's
terrain can't be taken when it's covered by clouds, the project members
checked the weather forecast and contacted UCSD every day during the
11 days that the shuttle was in orbit. Because there's a big time difference
between Japan and the U.S. West Coast, where UCSD is located, the students
sometimes had to meet at 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning.
"I
want a satellite photo of my house," one of the students joked. They
succeeded in photographing the Izu Peninsula in Japan and the Nile River
in Egypt. "The photos are much better than we'd expected," they said,
and cheered excitedly at seeing the beautiful images they had taken.
|
![](../kanagawa-u/images/title01.gif)
![](../kanagawa-u/images/title03.gif)
|
2 Midwinter Training
Shortly
before sunrise a February morning, eleventh graders gather at the school,
their breath white from the cold. It's the start of a week-long early
morning midwinter training, another one of Meikei High School's special
events.
|
During
this period, the eleventh graders all stay in a dormitory. From 5:30 every
morning, the girls practice kendo (Japanese fencing), while the boys practice
rugby. In the lit-up gymnasium, barefoot girls in kendo equipment begin
running laps inside the gym, shouting "Wasshoi! Wasshoi!" to keep their
spirits up.
|
Then,
after receiving instructions on basic techniques by their teacher, Mr.
Murashima, they begin practicing with alumni and students of nearby Tsukuba
University who have come to help. The boys, meanwhile, train outside.
Undaunted by the icy grounds, they start off by practicing passes. Then
they run around and scrummage in a mock game.
|
One
girl says, "It's cold, it's dark, and it's hard to get out of bed. Once
I start exercising, though, it becomes a lot of fun, and I work up a really
good sweat." "The ground is frozen, and the air is chilly. I wear three
shirts, but there are some who wear five!" says a boy, smiling. Midwinter
training is not an easy ordeal, but it gives students a special sense
of achievement. |
|